Newborns with Massive Intestinal Loss: Difficult Choices
- 17 March 1988
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 318 (11) , 703-707
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm198803173181111
Abstract
Before total parenteral nutrition was possible, most infants with extensive intestinal loss died of starvation and infection. The ability to provide sufficient calories intravenously has permitted the survival of many infants with short intestines. For these patients, however, total parenteral nutrition has been viewed as a temporary, adjunctive therapy that allows the residual intestine time to undergo a complex adaptive process for sustaining enteral feeding. Infants with intestinal loss so massive as to make the possibility of enteral nutrition uncertain or unlikely pose an ethical dilemma.Consider the following case, of a neonate who had extensive loss of the small . . .Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Short Bowel Syndrome in Infants and ChildrenPediatric Clinics of North America, 1985
- Improved survival in very short small bowelof infancy with use of long-term parenteral nutritionThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1985
- Morbidity and mortality of short-bowel syndrome acquired in infancy: An updateJournal of Pediatric Surgery, 1984
- Normal intestinal length in preterm infantsJournal of Pediatric Surgery, 1983
- Extreme short-bowel syndrome in an infantJournal of Pediatric Surgery, 1983
- Treatment and metabolic findings in extreme short-bowel syndrome with 11 cm jejunal remnantJournal of Pediatric Surgery, 1983
- Pathophysiology and Treatment of Short Bowel SyndromeSurgical Clinics of North America, 1980
- A clinical study of young infants after small intestinal resectionThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1979
- Ethics and the Moment of Clinical TruthPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1978
- OBSERVATION UPON THE GROWTH AND LENGTH OF THE HUMAN INTESTINEThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1924