Results 251 to 260 of about 409,268 (299)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Archives of Disease in Childhood, 2009
Intestinal ...
John, Puntis, Huw R, Jenkins
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Intestinal ...
John, Puntis, Huw R, Jenkins
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Current Opinion in Anaesthesiology, 2005
The gastrointestinal tract plays a major role in critical illness. We will review four common problem areas pertaining to the gut and abdominal compartment that intensivists managing critically ill patients must deal with on an everyday basis.In the area of enteral nutrition, there have been concerns that early feeding in hemodynamically unstable ...
Ziad N, Kutayli +2 more
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The gastrointestinal tract plays a major role in critical illness. We will review four common problem areas pertaining to the gut and abdominal compartment that intensivists managing critically ill patients must deal with on an everyday basis.In the area of enteral nutrition, there have been concerns that early feeding in hemodynamically unstable ...
Ziad N, Kutayli +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Irreversible Intestinal Failure
Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, 2004ABSTRACTIntestinal failure (IF) can be defined as the reduction of functional gut mass below the minimal amount necessary for digestion and absorption adequate to satisfy the nutrient and fluid requirements for maintenance in adults or growth in children.
Olivier, Goulet +3 more
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Current Opinion in Critical Care, 2010
The review aims to highlight the importance of acute gastrointestinal failure in the postoperative patient, to clarify the clinical circumstances in which acute intestinal failure complicates postoperative management, and to discuss recent advances and controversy in our understanding of the cause and pathogenesis.Acute postoperative intestinal failure
Carlson, Gordon L., Dark, Paul
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The review aims to highlight the importance of acute gastrointestinal failure in the postoperative patient, to clarify the clinical circumstances in which acute intestinal failure complicates postoperative management, and to discuss recent advances and controversy in our understanding of the cause and pathogenesis.Acute postoperative intestinal failure
Carlson, Gordon L., Dark, Paul
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Clinical Radiology, 2010
Intestinal failure (IF) is the inability of the alimentary tract to digest and absorb sufficient nutrition to maintain normal fluid balance, growth, and health. It commonly arises from disease affecting the mesenteric root. Although severe IF is usually managed in specialized units, it lies at the end of a spectrum with degrees of nutritional ...
J, Davidson, A, Plumb, H, Burnett
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Intestinal failure (IF) is the inability of the alimentary tract to digest and absorb sufficient nutrition to maintain normal fluid balance, growth, and health. It commonly arises from disease affecting the mesenteric root. Although severe IF is usually managed in specialized units, it lies at the end of a spectrum with degrees of nutritional ...
J, Davidson, A, Plumb, H, Burnett
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New England Journal of Medicine, 2017
Once virtually uniformly fatal, pediatric intestinal failure is now considered a complex but survivable syndrome that afflicts tens of thousands of children. This article reviews the approach to children with intestinal failure.
Christopher P, Duggan, Tom, Jaksic
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Once virtually uniformly fatal, pediatric intestinal failure is now considered a complex but survivable syndrome that afflicts tens of thousands of children. This article reviews the approach to children with intestinal failure.
Christopher P, Duggan, Tom, Jaksic
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Isolated intestinal transplantation for intestinal failure
The American Journal of Gastroenterology, 2000Parenteral nutrition sustains life in patients with intestinal failure. However, some experience life-threatening complications from parenteral nutrition, and in these individuals intestinal transplantation may be lifesaving.This is a retrospective review of 28 consecutive isolated small bowel transplants performed in eight adults and 20 children ...
D L, Sudan +9 more
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British Journal of Hospital Medicine, 2007
The small bowel is a marvellous organ. First, it absorbs nutrients on behalf of all the other organs of the body. This function is not entirely ‘altruistic’: enteric (small-bowel) epithelium is itself nourished by luminal nutrients, which explains its disproportionately severe atrophy in starvation or total parenteral nutrition.
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The small bowel is a marvellous organ. First, it absorbs nutrients on behalf of all the other organs of the body. This function is not entirely ‘altruistic’: enteric (small-bowel) epithelium is itself nourished by luminal nutrients, which explains its disproportionately severe atrophy in starvation or total parenteral nutrition.
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Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, 2000
Abstract The recognition of intestinal failure (IF) as a distinct clinical entity over the past 20 years has primarily come about through the emergence of increasingly successful treatment based on use of intravenous nutrition delivered both in hospital and at home.
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Abstract The recognition of intestinal failure (IF) as a distinct clinical entity over the past 20 years has primarily come about through the emergence of increasingly successful treatment based on use of intravenous nutrition delivered both in hospital and at home.
openaire +2 more sources

