Length of stay in surgical patients: Nutritional predictive parameters revisited

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Abstract

Nutritional evaluation may predict clinical outcomes, such as hospital length of stay (LOS). We aimed to assess the value of nutritional risk and status methods, and to test standard anthropometry percentiles v. the 50th percentile threshold in predicting LOS, and to determine nutritional status changes during hospitalisation and their relation with LOS. In this longitudinal prospective study, 298 surgical patients were evaluated at admission and discharge. At admission, nutritional risk was assessed by Nutritional Risk Screening-2002 (NRS-2002), Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool (MUST) and nutritional status by Subjective Global Assessment (SGA), involuntary % weight loss in the previous 6 months and anthropometric parameters; % weight loss and anthropometry were reassessed at discharge. At admission, risk/undernutrition results by NRS-2002 (P

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Almeida, A. I., Correia, M., Camilo, M., & Ravasco, P. (2013). Length of stay in surgical patients: Nutritional predictive parameters revisited. British Journal of Nutrition, 109(2), 322–328. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114512001134

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