Aim: To examine the evolution of different parameters of the nutritional status after short-term oral protein-energy supplementation in moderately malnourished geriatric patients.
Methods: Seventeen hospitalized malnourished elderly patients and 12 healthy adults received dietary supplements for 10 days. A group of six malnourished elderly subjects served as controls. Spontaneous oral intakes, biological and biophysical markers of the nutritional status were measured. Fat-free mass (FFM) was assessed using Dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA), bio-impedance analysis (BIA) and anthropometry.
Results: In elderly subjects, the supplementation significantly increased both dietary intake (energy +32%, protein +65%) and FFM (+1.3 kg, P<0.001) as assessed using DXA. BIA and anthropometric data correlated with DXA measurements in the elderly (BIA: r=0.68--0.80, anthropometry: r=0.80--0.89), but failed to reflect accurately the changes measured in FFM. Supplementation had no notable effect on biological markers in any of the groups. IGF-I and hand-grip strength were not significantly influenced by the supplementation despite trends towards an improvement.
Conclusions: Monitoring short-term changes in nutritional status in malnourished elderly individuals is a problem in routine clinical management. Our data put in the limelight the changes in IGF-I values related to dietary supplementation, and, chiefly, suggest a prime role for the assessment of dietary intake and FFM, as assessed by DXA, as indicators of short-term efficacy of refeeding. Nevertheless larger studies are necessary to confirm the clinical and prognostic significance of the changes.
Copyright 2001 Harcourt Publishers Ltd.