Resting Energy Expenditure in Patients with End‐Stage Liver Disease and in Normal Population

Abstract
Resting energy expenditure (REE) was measured in 10 patients with end-stage liver disease (ELD) and in 31 normal controls. Basal energy expenditure (BEE) was also predicted by the Harris-Benedict equation. In order to correlate REE to lean body mass, the 24-hr urinary creatinine was measured in patients with ELD and in normal controls and expressed as kcal/g urinary creatinine. Linear regression analysis showed a statistically significant (p < 0.0001 ) correlation (r = 0.72) between the REE and the 24-hr urinary creatinine in normal controls, irrespective of age and sex. Mean BEE (1580 ± 160 vs 1575 ± 210) and REE (1755 ± 215 vs 1800 ± 330) were not significantly different between patients with ELD and controls. However, the mean REE was 1900 ± 610 kcal/g creatinine in patients with ELD and 1180 ± 260 (p < 0.0001) in controls. When related to lean tissue, patients with ELD had increased energy expenditure, confirming the hypermetabolic state suggested on clinical grounds. The use of urine creatinine to estimate energy expenditure may be a simple clinical technique to predict dietary energy needs in malnourished, unstressed patients. When this estimated energy expenditure/g creatinine (EEE) is compared to measured energy expenditure/g creatinine in malnourished, stressed patients, the EEE provides an index of the extent of hypermetabolism. (Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition11:305-308, 1987)