Results 341 to 350 of about 1,311,950 (378)
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Nursing Clinics of North America, 1997
Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is an exciting therapeutic intervention for the critically ill patient, as well as for the patient with permanent small bowel dysfunction requiring long-term nutrition support. It is a unique and complex modality with associated risks and complications if improperly prescribed or carelessly administered.
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Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is an exciting therapeutic intervention for the critically ill patient, as well as for the patient with permanent small bowel dysfunction requiring long-term nutrition support. It is a unique and complex modality with associated risks and complications if improperly prescribed or carelessly administered.
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Nursing Clinics of North America, 1989
Providing nourishment to the sick is one of the basic tenets of nursing practice. Today, as this fundamental human need is met through the modern technology of parenteral nutrition, nursing's role in providing nutritional care for patients has become more significant.
P H, Worthington, B A, Wagner
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Providing nourishment to the sick is one of the basic tenets of nursing practice. Today, as this fundamental human need is met through the modern technology of parenteral nutrition, nursing's role in providing nutritional care for patients has become more significant.
P H, Worthington, B A, Wagner
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Surgical Clinics of North America, 1977
Total parenteral nutrition has evolved as a distinct therapeutic reality within the past decade. Starvation or malnutrition need no longer be accepted as a necessary component of prolonged illness. Though current TPN techniques can be both safe and effective, the prevention of potential complications must always have a high priority.
G F, Reinhardt +2 more
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Total parenteral nutrition has evolved as a distinct therapeutic reality within the past decade. Starvation or malnutrition need no longer be accepted as a necessary component of prolonged illness. Though current TPN techniques can be both safe and effective, the prevention of potential complications must always have a high priority.
G F, Reinhardt +2 more
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Parenteral nutrition hypersensitivity
Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, 1990Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is widely used. Although mechanical, septic, and metabolic complications are well known, hypersensitivity skin reactions are rare. We describe a 16‐year‐old boy with Burkitt's lymphoma who developed a urticarial skin rash when treated with TPN and vitamins.
M, Levy, L L, Dupuis
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Surgical Clinics of North America, 1981
Home parenteral nutrition is a life-sustaining mode of therapy for patients with short bowel syndrome that is unresponsive to conventional therapy. It requires learning specialized skills through an intensive training program and carefully following this program in a home setting. This training can be best provided by a group of health care specialists
C D, Lees +7 more
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Home parenteral nutrition is a life-sustaining mode of therapy for patients with short bowel syndrome that is unresponsive to conventional therapy. It requires learning specialized skills through an intensive training program and carefully following this program in a home setting. This training can be best provided by a group of health care specialists
C D, Lees +7 more
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1981
The need for adequate nutrition is now considered a fundamental tenet in the management of most diseases. In the last decade, total parenteral nutrition has evolved as an important means for accomplishing this goal.
R T, Guild, J J, Cerda
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The need for adequate nutrition is now considered a fundamental tenet in the management of most diseases. In the last decade, total parenteral nutrition has evolved as an important means for accomplishing this goal.
R T, Guild, J J, Cerda
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Parenteral Nutrition Complications
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1992Sir.—I read with interest the Radiological Case of the Month in the December 1991 issue ofAJDC, concerning retrieval of hyperalimentation fluid from the cerebrospinal fluid in an infant with a central venous catheter in the inferior vena cava.1I previously reported a virtually identical case2with a more catastrophic result.
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Complications Of Parenteral Nutrition
Survey of Anesthesiology, 1986All hospitalized patients except infants (a total of 1,647 patients) who received central venous TPN solutions at UCDMC from 1981 through 1985 were studied to determine the incidence of complications from the use of TPN. A complication was considered to have occurred if the patient experienced obvious morbidity, mortality, or both; an event known to be
B M, Wolfe +4 more
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