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Zinc supplementation in burn patients.

Nancy Caldis-Coutris, Justin P Gawaziuk, Sarvesh Logsetty
Other Journal of burn care & research : official publication of the American Burn Association 2012 16 citazioni
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Tipo di studio
Controlled Clinical Trial
Popolazione
None
Intervento
Zinc supplementation in burn patients. 50 mg
Comparatore
None
Esito primario
None
Direzione dell'effetto
Neutral
Rischio di bias
Moderate

Abstract

Micronutrient supplementation is a common practice throughout many burn centers across North America; however, uncertainty pertaining to dose, duration, and side effects of such supplements persists. The authors prospectively collected data from 23 hospitalized patients with burn sizes ranging from 10 to 93% TBSA. Each patient received a daily multivitamin and mineral supplement, 50 mg zinc (Zn) daily, and 500 mg vitamin C twice daily. Supplements were administered orally or enterally. Albumin, prealbumin, C-reactive protein, serum Zn, and serum copper were measured weekly during hospital admission until levels were within normal reference range. Our study concluded that 50 mg daily dose of Zn resulted in normal serum levels in 19 of 23 patients at discharge; 50 mg Zn supplementation did not interfere with serum copper levels; and Zn supplements, regardless of administration route, did not result in gastrointestinal side effects.

TL;DR

This study concluded that 50 mg daily dose of Zn resulted in normal serum levels in 19 of 23 patients at discharge; 50 mg Zn supplementation did not interfere with serum copper levels; and Zn supplements, regardless of administration route, did not result in gastrointestinal side effects.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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