Malnutrition in Spinal Cord Injury: More Than Nutritional Deficiency

Yannis Dionyssiotis

Abstract


    Denervation of the spinal cord below the level of injury leads to complications producing malnutrition. Nutritional status affects mortality and pathology of injured subjects and it has been reported that two thirds of individuals enrolled in rehabilitation units are malnourished. Therefore, the aim should be either to maintain an optimal nutritional status, or supplement these subjects in order to overcome deficiencies in nutrients or prevent obesity. This paper reviews methods of nutritional assessment and describes the physiopathological mechanisms of malnutrition based on the assumption that spinal cord injured subjects need to receive adequate nutrition to promote optimal recovery, placing nutrition as a first line treatment and not an afterthought in the rehabilitation of spinal cord injury.




doi:10.4021/jocmr924w

Keywords


Spinal cord injury; Malnutrition; Obesity; Physiopathology; Rehabilitation

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Journal of Clinical Medicine Research, bimonthly, ISSN 1918-3003 (print), 1918-3011 (online), published by Elmer Press Inc.      

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