Fasting in critical illness: the role of ketonuria — a retrospective observational study
Irene Ottaviani, Simona Tantillo, Lorenzo Miggiano, Martina Guarnera, Marco Menghini, Francesco Talarico, Federica Mazzanti, Nicola Cilloni

TL;DR
This study examines how ketonuria in ICU patients relates to metabolic issues and finds that low BMI and hypoalbuminemia increase the risk of shock.
Contribution
The study identifies a link between ketonuria, hypoalbuminemia, and shock risk in ICU patients, emphasizing early recognition of starvation ketoacidosis.
Findings
Ketonuric patients with shock had a lower BMI compared to those without shock.
Surgical patients showed lower albumin levels and higher shock rates than medical patients.
Medical patients had a longer ICU length of stay compared to surgical patients.
Abstract
Metabolic acidosis is a frequent finding in patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU). It can be caused by prolonged fasting due to surgical procedures or by medical conditions that lead to starvation ketoacidosis (SKA). Early recognition and treatment of SKA could prevent several life-threatening complications, improving survival and reducing the ICU length of stay. We retrospectively screened all medical records of patients admitted to the ICU (Maggiore Hospital, Bologna, North Italy) from May 2022 to April 2023. We included patients aged 18 years or older who presented ketonuria detected in the urine sample. We analyzed 190 patients with ketonuria at ICU admission. Postsurgical patients showed lower levels of albumin and a higher rate of shock compared to medical patients. Ketonuric patients with shock had a lower body mass index (BMI) compared to patients without shock…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiet and metabolism studies · Clinical Nutrition and Gastroenterology · Metabolism and Genetic Disorders
