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Selvaag E.*, Bøhmer T.* and Benkestock K.**
* Dept. of Medicine, Aker University Hospital, Oslo, Norway
** Dept. of Structural Chemistry, Pharmacia & Upjohn, S-11287, Stockholm
Sweden.
Correspondance to: Thomas Bøhmer, MD. PhD.
Department of medicine, Aker University Hospital.
Phone 47-22 89 48 28. Fax 47 22 89 40 08. E-mail: thomas.
boehmer @ ioks.uio.no
Background: Patients with pressure sores have as part of their treatment
been reefed with energy and proteins with varying result. It has been
uncertain, however, to what an extent these patients also were depleted
of micronutrients which might be critical for ulcer healing.
Objective: To study the nutritional intake and nutritional status of a
number of micronutrients in geriatric pressure sore patients and in matched
controls.
Design: The nutritional intake and nutritional status as anthropometric
measures, serum conc. of albumin, zinc, and of vitamins (ascorbic acid,
riboflavin, calcidiol), were measured. Thiamin pyrophosphate and pyridoxal-5-phosphate
were determined in whole blood from 11 geriatric in-patients with pressure
sores and 11 matched controls.
Results: The serum conc. of ascorbic acid was significantly (p< 0.05)
more reduced in pressure sore patients (mean S.D.) 4.2 3.4 (ug/ml) than
in control patients 7.4 5.4 (ug/ml) which still was lower than in a reference
group (10.9 1.9) (ug/ml). In all the geriatric patients compared to the
reference group, the conc. of serum- riboflavin was reduced to about 15
%, thiamine-pyrophosphate and pyridoxine-5-phosphate in whole blood and
serum calcidiol to about 50 %, without any differences between the pressure
sore patients and the matched controls.
Refeeding of pressure sore patients who often are catabolic and have increased
needs for protein and energy, should include micronutrients not only to
cover recommended dietary allowances, but sufficient to reach normal nutritional
status for the individual micronutrient.
Keywords: ascorbic acid , geriatric patients, nutritional status, nutritional
intake, pressure sores, vitamins
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