The Practice of Enteral Nutrition: Clinical Evidence for Feeding Protocols.
The aim of standardized feeding protocols should be the prevention of nutritional deficits in critically ill infants.
The aim of standardized feeding protocols should be the prevention of nutritional deficits in critically ill infants.
The central aim of standardized feeding protocols should be the prevention of cumulative nutritional deficits in critically ill infants.
This study assesses the exposure to phthalates of preterm neonates who received total parenteral nutrition during their stay in the neonatal intensive care unit and the risk of neurodevelopment delays.
We examined aspects of nutrition for neonates receiving extracorporeal life support, including nutritional requirements, nutrition provision, current practices, long-term outcomes, and special population considerations.
We evaluated the impact of a standardized postoperative feeding protocol on enteral nutrition delivery in children after liver transplantation.
In this review, we examine aspects of nutrition for neonates receiving extra corporeal life support, including nutritional requirements, nutrition provision, current practices, long-term outcomes, and special population considerations.
We examined developmental differences between fetal/infant and adult livers, and used human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived hepatocyte-like cells to gain insights into the contribution of development to altered sterol metabolism and parenteral nutrition-associated cholestasis.
This study aimed to assess the association between feeding during therapeutic hypothermia and outcomes.
Clinical trial to determine whether higher-volume feedings improve postnatal
growth among infants born very preterm.
The objective was to determine whether higher-volume feedings improve growth outcomes among infants born very preterm.