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Abstract Purpose: Follow the Nutrition Care Process Case: 82 yr old female with small bowel obstruction (SBO) who required total parental nutrition (TPN) Previous hospital visit for SBO – noninvasive treatment and low fiber Hospitalized again for SBO secondary to adhesions PMH: Uterine cancer requiring hysterectomy TPN, lysis of adhesions, and right partial colectomy Discharged after 15 days on oral low fiber Disease Description – Small Bowel Obstruction The small intestine is a complex organ that plays a major role in the absorption of nutrients When contents of the intestine are blocked and unable to pass freely, this is considered a small bowel obstructions (SBO). Signs & Symptoms Abdominal distention Constipation Vomiting Abdominal pain and cramps Nausea Diarrhea Disease Description – Causes Mechanical - characterized by the Nonmechanical - factors that narrowing of the intestinal lumen interfere with the muscle action or Inflammation or trauma to the bowel innervation of the bowel Paralytic ileus Neoplasms Mesenteric embolus or thrombus Adhesions (Most common) Hypokalemia Hernias Volvulus (twisted bowel) Compression from outside the intestinal tract Evidence-Based Nutrition Recommendations Title: Reoperation on the Abdomen Encased in Adhesions Purpose: To determine the short and long-term outcomes after lysis of adhesions Method: 40 patients who had recently undergone lysis of adhesions were contacted to evaluate the outcome Results: 1 postoperative death, 24 early complications. 28 out of 31 had resolved SBO from the surgery Long-term outcomes: all subjects able to tolerate oral feedings Evidence-Based Nutrition Recommendations Title: Burden of Adhesions in Abdominal & Pelvic Surgery: A Systematic Review and Metanalysis Purpose: To estimate the burden of complications associated with abdominal adhesions Method: Analysis of 196 papers from PubMed, Embase, and Central which reported incidences of adhesion related complications Results: Increase risk of developing a SBO in open abdominal/pelvic surgery. Adhesive SBO associated with longer hospital stays.
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