Protein depletion and metabolic stress in elderly patients who have a fracture of the hip Journal Article


Authors: Patterson, B. M.; Cornell, C. N.; Carbone, B.; Levine, B.; Chapman, D.
Article Title: Protein depletion and metabolic stress in elderly patients who have a fracture of the hip
Abstract: A prospective study was performed to determine the effect of protein depletion and postoperative nutritional status on the outcome in sixty-three elderly patients who had been admitted to the hospital because of a fracture of the hip. The parameters that were used to determine the degree of protein depletion included levels of albumin, of prealbumin, and of transferrin; total lymphocyte count; and nitrogen-balance studies. The outcomes that were examined were the development of complications, the length of the stay in the hospital, the ability to return to the pre-fracture level of function, and over-all survivorship. The hypothesis was that the acute fracture and the subsequent operation are severe stresses in these elderly, often compromised patients. The results supported the hypothesis. Thirty-seven patients (58 per cent) in the study group were in a protein-depleted state during the period of hospitalization. The patients who were protein-depleted had a higher prevalence of complications, were less likely to return to their pre-fracture environment, and tended to stay in the hospital longer, as compared with the nonprotein-depleted patients. Survivorship analysis showed that protein-depleted patients had a significantly lower probability of survival one year after the fracture of the hip (p = 0.02). Elderly patients who sustain the trauma of a fracture of the hip should be managed appropriately with regard to intake of nutrients in the postoperative period.
Keywords: sweden; malnutrition; femur; nitrogen; prealbumin; nutrition; growth-hormone; index; serum transferrin
Journal Title: Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery
Volume: 74A
Issue: 2
ISSN: 0021-9355
Publisher: Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery  
Date Published: 1992-02-01
Start Page: 251
End Page: 260
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:A1992HJ65100010
DOI: 10.2106/00004623-199274020-00011
PROVIDER: wos
PUBMED: 1541619
Notes: Article -- Source: Wos
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Douglass S. Chapman
    35 Chapman