Nutrition support (tube feeding) as a rehabilitation intervention.

Journal: Archives Of Physical Medicine And Rehabilitation
Published:
Abstract

James R, Gines D, Menlove A, Horn SD, Gassaway J, Smout RJ. Nutrition support (tube feeding) as a rehabilitation intervention.

Objective: To describe site variation in use of enteral feeding and its association with stroke rehabilitation outcomes, controlling for a variety of confounding variables.

Methods: Prospective observational cohort study. Methods: Six inpatient rehabilitation facilities in the United States. Methods: Patients (N=919) from the Post-Stroke Rehabilitation Outcomes Project database with moderate or severe stroke who were discharged to home, community, or skilled nursing facility. Methods: Not applicable. Methods: Change in total, motor, and cognitive FIM instrument scores and change in severity of illness.

Results: Monitoring of nutritional status and the frequency of tube-feeding interventions for patients with moderate and severe stroke varied significantly among sites. Patients with tube feeding had higher severity of illness and lower functioning on admission compared with patients who did not receive tube feeding. However, when we controlled for severity of illness, admission FIM score, and other important covariates, we found that patients with severe strokes who were tube fed for more than 25% of their stay had greater increases in total, motor, and cognitive FIM scores and greater improvement in severity of illness by discharge.

Conclusions: Nutrition support (tube feeding) is an effective therapy in rehabilitation service for patients with severe strokes and is associated with greater motor and cognitive improvements, even in patients with the most severe strokes.

Authors
Roberta James, Deon Gines, Angela Menlove, Susan Horn, Julie Gassaway, Randall Smout