Micronutrient intake to protect against osteoporosis during and after critical illness.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the role of calcium and other micronutrients in bone health and fracture prevention in critically ill patients.
Results Summary
The study found that while calcium and vitamin D are the best-studied micronutrients for bone health, there is limited high-quality clinical evidence supporting their efficacy in critically ill populations. Current guidelines suggest their supplementation may help mitigate bone loss during recovery.
Population
Critically ill patients recovering from intensive care.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
calcium and vitamin D supplementation | neutral | bone health and fracture prevention | critically ill populations | - | best studied | #1 |
micronutrients (calcium, phosphorous, magnesium, vitamin D, vitamin C, vitamin K, and certain trace elements) supplementation | decrease | bone loss and its sequelae | critically ill populations | - | might mitigate | #2 |
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Improved survival from critical illness has enhanced the focus on ways to augment functional outcomes following discharge from the Intensive Care Unit. An area that is gaining increased attention is the effect of critical illness on bone health and fragility fractures following the episode. This review discusses the micronutrients that may play a role in bone metabolism and the potential benefits of their supplementation to prevent osteoporosis. These include calcium, phosphorous, magnesium, vitamin D, vitamin C, vitamin K, and certain trace elements. FINDINGS: Although there is sound physiological basis for the involvement of these micronutrients in bone health and fracture prevention, there are few clinically relevant publications in this area with calcium and vitamin D being the best studied to date. SUMMARY: In the absence of high-quality evidence in critically ill populations, attention to measurement and supplementation of these micronutrients as per current guidelines outlining micronutrient requirements in enteral and parenteral nutrition might mitigate bone loss and its sequelae in the recovery phase from critical illness.