Nutritional assessment in preterm infants.

@article{Griffin2007NutritionalAI,
  title={Nutritional assessment in preterm infants.},
  author={Ian J Griffin},
  journal={Nestle Nutrition workshop series. Paediatric programme},
  year={2007},
  volume={59},
  pages={
          177-88; discussion 188-92
        }
}
  • I. Griffin
  • Published 9 January 2007
  • Medicine
  • Nestle Nutrition workshop series. Paediatric programme
If the aim of nutritional assessment of preterm infants is to identify suboptimal (or excessive) provision of protein, energy and micronutrients, most currently available methods perform poorly. Assessment of body weight is limited by the confounding effect of fluid status especially in the first few days of life, and measurements of linear growth are relatively imprecise and slow to respond to nutritional changes. Growth assessment is hampered by the lack of an adequate reference standard… 
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References

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Postnatal malnutrition and growth retardation: an inevitable consequence of current recommendations in preterm infants?
TLDR
Preterm infants inevitably accumulate a significant nutrient deficit in the first few weeks of life that will not be replaced when current RDIs are fed and can be directly related to subsequent postnatal growth retardation.
Nutrient requirements for preterm infant formulas.
  • C. Klein
  • Medicine
    The Journal of nutrition
  • 2002
TLDR
Critical areas for future research on the nutritional requirements specific for preterm-LBW infants are identified and recommendations for nutrients not required in formula for term infants such as lactose and arginine are identified.
Adjustable fortification of human milk fed to preterm infants: does it make a difference?
TLDR
Higher protein intake appears to have been primarily responsible for the improved growth with the new adjustable fortification regimen, which could be a solution to the problem of protein undernutrition among premature infants fed human milk.
Feeding Preterm Infants after Hospital Discharge: Effect of Dietary Manipulation on Nutrient Intake and Growth
TLDR
Preterm infants were found to increase their volume of intake to compensate for differences in energy density between formulas, and grew faster than infant girls fed a preterm formula or infant boys fed a term formula after initial hospital discharge.
Evidence for functional immaturity of the ornithine-urea cycle in very-low-birth-weight infants.
TLDR
Findings are consistent with a somewhat limited capacity of the immature infant for expansion of urea production for some time after birth, which should be considered when metabolic responses to protein intake are studied and evaluated in such infants.
High Protein Pre-Term Infant Formula: Effect on Nutrient Balance, Metabolic Status and Growth
TLDR
Increased protein accretion paralleled by better weight gain without evidence of metabolic stress indicates that a formula with a protein content of 3.6 g/100 kcal better meets protein needs in these rapidly-growing infants.
Feeding Preterm Infants after Hospital Discharge: Effect of Diet on Body Composition
TLDR
DEXA was precise enough to detect differences in whole body composition during dietary intervention in preterm infants, consistent with the idea that the preterm formula more closely met protein and/or protein-energy needs in rapidly growing preterm male infants.
Postnatal Growth in Preterm Infants: Have We Got it Right?
  • R. Cooke
  • Medicine
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TLDR
Issues of inherent errors in current recommendation as well as systematic errors in the way nutrient requirements are estimated in these high-risk infants are addressed.
Randomized, Controlled Trial of Slow Versus Rapid Feeding Volume Advancement in Preterm Infants
TLDR
Among infants between 1000 and 2000 g at birth, starting and advancing feedings at 30 mL/kg per day seems to be a safe practice and results in fewer days to reach full-volume feedings than using 20 litres per day, which leads to faster weight gain and fewer days of intravenous fluids.
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