Nutritional status and nosocomial infections among adult elective surgery patients in a Mexican tertiary care hospital

Controversy exists as to whether obesity constitutes a risk-factor or a protective-factor for the development of nosocomial Infection (NI). According to the obesity-paradox, there is evidence that moderate obesity is a protective-factor. In Mexico few studies have focused on the nutritional status (...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2015-03, Vol.10 (3), p.e0118980-e0118980
Hauptverfasser: Rodríguez-García, Judith, Gamiño-Iriarte, Astrid, Rodea-Montero, Edel Rafael
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Controversy exists as to whether obesity constitutes a risk-factor or a protective-factor for the development of nosocomial Infection (NI). According to the obesity-paradox, there is evidence that moderate obesity is a protective-factor. In Mexico few studies have focused on the nutritional status (NS) distribution in the hospital setting. The aim of this study was to estimate the distribution of NS and the prevalence of nosocomial infection NI among adult elective surgery (ES) patients and to compare the clinical and anthropometric characteristics and length of stays (LOS) between obese and non-obese patients and between patients with and without NI. We conducted a cross-sectional study with a sample (n = 82) adult ES patients (21-59 years old) who were recruited from a tertiary-care hospital. The prevalences of each NS category and NI were estimated, the assessments were compared between groups (Mann-Whitney, Chi-squared or the Fisher's-exact-test), and the association between preoperative risk-factors and NI was evaluated using odds ratios. The distribution of subjects by NS category was: underweight (3.66%), normal-weight (28.05%), overweight (35.36%), and obese (32.93%). The prevalence of NI was 14.63%. The LOS was longer (p
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0118980