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Body
composition measurement and its
Ross
C. Smith MD, FRACS.
Associate Professor in Surgery, The University
of Sydney, Australia.
Good health implies normal body composition
(BC). Keys? study of partial starvation demonstrated
that starvation induced a significant loss of
functioning tissue or Body Cell Mass (BCM) and
fat stores and that the recovery of BCM took
longer than the time taken to lose this tissue.
Further, in this study extracellular fluid volume
(ECV) was maintained. Thus starvation alone
resulted in a relative increase in ECV to BCM.
This effect is exaggerated in septic and traumatized
ICU patients. Depletion of BCM and its associated
protein results in increased morbidity and mortality.
Anthropometry and bioelectrical impedance are
simple methods for bedside body composition
assessment. Most assessments relate to the measurement
of body fat and water and the partitioning of
the lean body mass into the intra-cellular and
extra-cellular compartments. Total body nitrogen
(TBN) and Total body potassium (TBK) can be
measured directly by nuclear techniques which
require specialized equipment. These measures
can be used to assess muscle mass and visceral
mass because of the greater intracellular potassium
concentration in muscle. DEXA can also be used
to measure these compartments. The relative
merits of these techniques will be discussed.
Isotope dilution studies developed by Moore
and others have substantiated fluid and electrolyte
requirements of ill patients and have been used
in important early studies of BC in ICU patients
by Shizgal et al. They demonstrated that BCM
predicted outcome, resting energy expenditure,
and assessed patients' response to nutritional
therapy.
Professor Hill's sophisticated BC laboratory
was close to the ICU. His team could measure
TBN, TBK, TBCl, TBW, etc and they described
the difficulties of maintaining these values
in patients in the ICU setting. Although they
have shown that it was easy to provide sufficient
calories to maintain fat stores, it was difficult
to provide sufficient amino acids to maintain
protein stores in severely traumatized patients.
Our studies after major surgical trauma have
indicated that there is improved muscle sparing
if greater amounts of nutrition are provided.
Further, measures demonstrating depleted body
composition can predict poor outcome in many
different patient groups including ICU, surgical,
renal failure patients and in many other groups.
Body composition measures have limited value
in the management of individual patients in
the ICU setting, although they have a proven
place in individual patient care in the event
of renal failure. However, by studying groups
of patients undergoing specific protocols these
measures are important outcome measures demonstrating
benefit. They become most important when clinical
outcome endpoints are unable to be used because
group sizes lack statistical power.
From "The Future of Nutrition Support
and Cooperation Among the Asian Regions"
The 10th PENSA Congress, Dusit Resort Pattaya,
Chonburi,Thailand.
October 27-29, 2004 : Page 70
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