Use of a fish oil-based lipid emulsion to treat essential fatty acid deficiency in a soy allergic patient receiving parenteral nutrition.
نویسندگان
چکیده
The treatment of essential fatty acid deficiency (EFAD) in a 17-year-old male following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation is described. His transplant was complicated by gastrointestinal bleeding that precluded the use of enteral feedings. Due to a severe soy allergy, he could not tolerate any intravenous fat emulsions marketed in the US. After months of receiving fat-free parenteral nutrition and intermittent use of enteral feeds, he developed signs and symptoms consistent with EFAD, including a rash and an elevated plasma triene:tetraene ratio of 0.231 (0.013-0.05). After receiving FDA approval, a parenteral fish oil emulsion was administered to provide fat calories and sufficient alpha-linolenic and linoleic acid to correct his EFAD. Therapy was initiated at 0.2 g/kg/day and advanced to 0.67 g/kg/day, providing approximately 45 mg/kg/day of linoleic acid. After 10 days of therapy, his rash disappeared and his triene:tetraene ratio improved to 0.07. By day 17 the ratio normalized to 0.047. This suggests that using a fish oil emulsion with minimal linoleic acid may be safely used as the sole source of fat calories and may be an option to prevent or treat EFAD in subjects allergic to soy that require a parenteral source of fat.
منابع مشابه
Fish oil-based lipid emulsion: current updates on a promising novel therapy for the management of parenteral nutrition-associated liver disease
Intestinal failure is characterized by loss of enteral function to absorb necessary nutrients and water to sustain life. Parenteral nutrition (PN) is a lifesaving therapeutic modality for patients with intestinal failure. Lifelong PN is also needed for patients who have short bowel syndrome due to extensive resection or a dysmotility disorder with malabsorption. However, prolonged PN is associa...
متن کاملThe use of alternative lipid emulsions in paediatric and neonatal parenteral nutrition
Lipid emulsions are an important part of paediatric parenteral nutrition as they provide energy, fat soluble vitamins and are a source of essential fatty acids. Soya bean based oil emulsions have however been identified as one of the major causative factors in the development of PN related cholestasis. The newer lipid emulsion containing fish oil has been shown to reduce the risk of such compli...
متن کاملSafety and efficacy of a fish-oil-based fat emulsion in the treatment of parenteral nutrition-associated liver disease.
BACKGROUND Parenteral nutrition-associated liver disease can be a progressive and fatal entity in children with short-bowel syndrome. Soybean-fat emulsions provided as part of standard parenteral nutrition may contribute to its pathophysiology. METHODS We compared safety and efficacy outcomes of a fish-oil-based fat emulsion in 18 infants with short-bowel syndrome who developed cholestasis (s...
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Published data assessing the efficacy and toxicity of omega-3 fatty acid emulsion in children are limited. Until recently, children requiring long-term parenteral nutrition who experienced parenteral nutrition–associated liver disease (PNALD) were likely to die from infection or liver disease before receiving a small bowel and/or liver transplant. With the introduction of parenteral fish oil (1...
متن کاملParenteral Nutrition and Lipids
Lipids have multiple physiological roles that are biologically vital. Soybean oil lipid emulsions have been the mainstay of parenteral nutrition lipid formulations for decades in North America. Utilizing intravenous lipid emulsions in parenteral nutrition has minimized the dependence on dextrose as a major source of nonprotein calories and prevents the clinical consequences of essential fatty a...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Clinical nutrition
دوره 24 5 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2005