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Posters will be displayed in the Salon des Ambassadeurs and in the Foyer in two different sessions.
The First Posters session should be installed on Sunday, September 21st, 2003 between 16.00 and18.00 and removed on Monday, September 22nd, 2003 between 16.00 and 17.00.
The Second Posters session should be installed on Monday, September 22nd, 2003 between 17.00and 18.00 and removed on Tuesday, September 23rd, 2003 between 16.00 and 17.00.
All the necessary material will be available from the Exhibition Desk in the Registration Area.
All abstracts presented orally within the symposia programme (See p. 22) will also be viewed asposters during the Poster-viewing session (Monday and Tuesday, between 13.45 and 14.15) for freediscussion. All authors should then be present at their poster on the appropriate day during thePoster-viewing session.
All abstracts presented as posters (XYX-P) will also be viewed as posters during the Poster-viewingsession (Monday and Tuesday, between 13.45 and 14.15) for free discussion. These posters willalso be integrated in Guided Poster Sessions for full presentation. All authors should then:
■ Be present at their poster on the appropriate day during the Poster-viewing session (Monday orTuesday, between 13.45 and 14.15) for free discussion of their poster.
■ Be present at their poster on the appropriate day during the Guided Poster Session (Monday orTuesday, between 14.15 and 15.30) for full presentation of their poster.
All participants of the Congress are encouraged to find the presentations of their particular interestsand join the authors of the abstracts in these discussions.
21
POSTER PRESENTATION
25ESPEN
Congress
POSTER VIEWING TIME SCHEDULE
(These abstracts will be viewed as posters according to the below time schedule and will be presented orally within the symposia programme)
Monday, September 22nd, 2003 - From 13.45 to 14.15
POSTERS PANEL N° TOPIC001-O 001 Physiology and nutritional assessment121-O to 128-O 052 to 059 Vitamins, trace elements, minerals141-O to 146-O 072 to 077 Cell biology, nutrients and genes281-O to 290-O 137 to 146 Treatment and outcome346-O to 349-O 178 to 181 Nutritional epidemiology, communication
Tuesday, September 23rd, 2003 - From 13.45 to 14.15
POSTERS PANEL N° TOPIC050-O to 056-O 024 to 030 Carbohydrates059-O to 062-O 031 to 034 Fatty acids, lipids and obesity091-O to 099-O 047 to 055 Protein and amino acid metabolism188-O to 200-O 086 to 098 Liver and Gastrointestinal tract226-O 112 Malignancies256-O to 257-O 133 to 133 Pediatrics378-O to 380-O 182 to 184 Nutritional pharmacology
LIST OF ORAL PRESENTATIONS POSTER
001-O PATHOGENESIS OF OSTEOPENIA IN ANOREXIA NERVOSA: A MULTIVARIATE ANALYSISL. Di Pascoli, M. Nardi, A. Favaro, P. Santonastaso, R. Zago, A. Lion, D. Milazzo, E. Zola, L. Caregaro, Italy
050-O LACTULOSE INHIBITS LIPOLYSIS IN OBESE SUBJECTSH. Piloquet, V. Ferchaud-Roucher, Y. Zair, M. Krempf, France
051-O METABOLIC PROFILE OF OBESE PATIENTS WITH NON-ALCOHOLIC STEATOHEPATITIS (NASH)R. Al-Jaouni, A. Tran, S. M. Schneider, F. Longo, J. Sadoul, J. Giudicelli, X. Hébuterne, France
052-O WHOLE BODY PROTEOLYSIS IS LESS RESPONSIVE TO INSULIN ACTION IN ELDERLY SUBJECTSINDEPENDENTLY OF GLUCOSE TOLERANCEC. Guillet, P. Gachon, B. Morio, A. Zangarelli, C. Giraudet, P. Rousset, Y. Boirie, France
053-O MUSCLE FATTY ACID OXIDATIVE CAPACITY IS NOT ALTERED BY AGE BUT BY PHYSICAL INACTIVITY.ASSOCIATION WITH INSULIN SENSITIVITY.B. Morio-Liondore, V. Rimbert, M. Bedu, J. Hocquette, Y. Boirie, France
054-O RESTRICTED FATTY ACID MOBILIZATION FROM ADIPOSE TISSUE DURING EXERCISE IN TYPE 2 DIABETESMELLITUS.L. Simonsen, O. Henriksen, L. Enevoldsen, J. Bülow, Denmark
055-O POSTPRANDIAL HYPERLIPIDEMIA: EFFECT OF ACUTE EXERCISEL. H. Enevoldsen, L. Simonsen, J. Bülow, Denmark
056-O THE IMPACT OF SLOW RELEASE STARCH CONTAINING ENTERAL NUTRITION ON BLOOD GLUCOSE/INSULINRESPONSES IN TYPE 2 DIABETIC PATIENTS - RANDOMIZED, CONTROLLED, MULTI-CENTER CLINICAL STUDYH. Wang, Z. Jiang, China
059-O HEPATIC INDICATORS OF INFLAMMATION FOLLOWING THE INFUSION OF PHARMACEUTICALLY UNSTABLEALL-IN-ONE MIXTURES (AIO) IN RATSD. F. Driscoll, P. Ling, B. R. Bistrian, USA
060-O FIBRINOGEN SYNTHESIS IN LEAN AND OBESE WOMEN: BASAL VALUES AND RESPONSE TO WEIGHTREDUCTIONB. Mittendorfer, S. Samaddar, B. Patterson, S. Klein, USA
22
ORAL PRESENTATIONS POSTER
LIST OF ORAL PRESENTATIONS POSTER
061-O EFFECTS OF N-3 PUFAS ON METABOLIC, INFLAMMATORY AND SYSTEMIC RESPONSES TO SINGLE LPS-INJECTION IN HEALTHY VOLUNTEERSB. Michaeli, M. M. Berger, L. Tappy, J. P. Revelly, M. C. Cayeux, R. Chioléro, Switzerland
062-O ENRICHMENT WITH DOCOSAHEXAENOIC ACID INCREASES THE SENSITIVITY OF HL-60 CELLS TO ARSENICTRIOXIDE: RELATION TO OXIDATIVE STRESSS. Sturlan, M. Baumgartner, T. Bachleitner-Hofmann, E. Roth, Austria
091-O INACTIVITY IMPAIRS AMINO ACID-INDUCED PROTEIN ANABOLISMB. Ciocchi, M. Heer, M. Lebenstedt, R. Barazzoni, M. Zanetti, M. Stulle, P. Platen, G. Guarnieri, G. Biolo, Italy & Germany
092-O STIMULATED MUSCLE PROTEIN METABOLISM DURING EARLY ENDOTOXEMIA IN MICE IS MEDIATED BY NOS-3.Y. C. Luiking, M. M. Hallemeesch, W. H. Lamers, P. B. Soeters, N. E. P. Deutz, Netherlands
093-O AMINO ACID STIMULATION OF INITIATION IN TRANSLATION OF SKELETAL MUSCLE PROTEIN BIOSYNTHESISB. Iresjö, E. Svanberg, K. Lundholm, Sweden
094-O MEASUREMENT OF AMINO ACID APPEARANCE AND DISAPPEARANCEV. Nehra, M. Bigelow, J. Maubois, Y. Boirie, K. Nair, USA
095-O PHYSIOLOGICAL HYPERINSULINEMIA AND HYPERAMINOACIDEMIA STIMULATE MITOCHONDRIAL PROTEINSYNTHESIS IN HEALTHY ELDERLY MEN.C. Guillet, P. Gachon, A. Zangarelli, C. Giraudet, P. Rousset, Y. Boirie, France
096-O INSULIN STIMULATES FRACTIONAL SYNTHESIS RATE OF MIXED LEUKOCYTE PROTEINS IN ADULT AND AGEDHEALTHY HUMANSS. Walrand, C. Guillet, M. Vasson, Y. Boirie, France
097-O GLUTAMINE INHIBITS LPS-INDUCED PLA2 ACTIVATION AND PROTECTS AGAINST ENDOTOXIN SHOCK IN THE MOUSEB. Cho, H. Yu, Z. Jin, H. S. Kim, Y. Jeong, South Korea
098-O LOW PLASMA ARGININE CONCENTRATION IN SEPTIC PATIENTS IS RELATED TO DIMINISHED DE NOVOARGININE PRODUCTION FROM CITRULLINE.Y. C. Luiking, L. Steens, M. Poeze, G. Ramsay, N. E. P. Deutz, Netherlands
099-O WHOLE BODY PROTEIN SYNTHESIS AND BREAKDOWN ARE UNCHANGED AFTER MAJOR HEPATECTOMY FORMALIGNANCIES IN MANM. C. Van De Poll, Y. C. Luiking, S. J. Wigmore, D. N. Redhead, O. J. Garden, J. W. Greve, J. A. Ross, N. E. Deutz,K. C. Fearon, C. H. Dejong, Netherlands & United Kingdom
121-O SODIUM DEFICIENCY DURING ENTERAL NUTRITION FOR CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTSM. Goto, A. Hiraide, S. Otsuka, K. Shimaya, M. Kyoriki, H. Sugimoto, Japan
122-O EFFECTS OF VITAMIN E DEPLETION/REPLETION ON VITAMIN E STATUS AND OXIDATIVE STRESS IN HEALTHYVOLUNTEERS.B. M. Winklhofer-Roob, G. Khoschsorur, A. Meinitzer, M. Maritschnegg, D. Hiller, S. Wuga, W. Wonisch, N. Cardinault, I. Sundl, J. M. Roob, J. Ribalta, E. Rock, Austria & France & Spain
123-O MODULATION OF HUMAN PMN OXYDATIVE RESPONSE: AGE AND CAROTENOID STATUS EFFECTSM. C. Farges, S. Walrand, R. Minet-Quinard, E. Thivat, N. Cardinault, E. Rock, J. Ribalta, B. Winklhofer-Roob, M. P. Vasson, France & Spain & Austria
124-O PARENTERAL VITAMIN C APPLICATION DURING ONGOING HEMODIALYSIS (HD).J. M. Roob, H. Holzer, B. M. Winklhofer-Roob, Austria
125-O SELENIUM CONCENTRATIONS IN MATERNAL AND UMBILICAL CORD BLOOD AT 24-42 WEEKS OFGESTATION: BASIS FOR OPTIMIZATION OF SELENIUM SUPPLEMENTATION TO PREMATURE INFANTSR. Shamir, R. N. Sammour, E. Diamond, I. Sohat, I. R. Makhoul, Israel
126-O FOOD INTAKE AND MICRONUTRIENT STATUS IN PATIENTS WITH CROHN’S DISEASEJ. Filippi, E. Eyraud, R. Al-Jaouni, S. M. Schneider, X. Hébuterne, France
127-O EFFECTS OF DIETARY CAROTENOID DEPLETION AND REPLETION ON LYMPHOCYTE PROLIFERATION DURINGAGINGR. Minet-Quinard, M. C. Farges, S. Walrand, E. Thivat, N. Cardinault, E. Rock, J. Ribalta, B. Winklhofer-Roob, M. P. Vasson, France & Spain & Austria
128-O HIGH SELENIUM DIET PROTECTS AGAINST INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE AND RESTORESMITOCHONDRIAL COLONIC TISSUE FUNCTIONO. Tirosh, R. Reifen, Israel
141-O HIGH-FAT ENTERAL NUTRITION DECREASES TNF-ALPHA AND PRESERVES GUT BARRIER FUNCTION IN RATS AFTER HEMORRHAGIC SHOCK .M. D. P. Luyer, M. Hadfoune, J. A. Jacobs, C. H. C. Dejong, W. A. Buurman, J. M. Greve, Netherlands
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142-O INCREASED CIRCULATING B AND T LYMPHOCYTE IN BURN PATIENTS GIVEN ENTERAL GLUTAMINE SUPPLEMENTD. R. Garrel, J. Bernier, Canada
143-O A SIGNIFICANT INTER-INDIVIDUAL VARIABILITY IN HUMAN CIRCADIAN CLOCK GENE EXPRESSION INPERIPHERAL BLOOD LYMPHOCYTESM. Yano, T. Azama, S. Nishimura, H. Iwanaga, M. Monden, Japan
144-O INTERLEUKIN-10 GENOTYPE AND GENE EXPRESSION AFFECT THE SEVERITY OF INFLAMMATORY STATE INHAEMODIALYSIS PATIENTSA. Bosutti, R. Barazzoni, S. Savoldi, M. Martone, F. Bianco, D. Pirulli, A. Amoroso, G. Panzetta, G. Guarnieri, G. Biolo, Italy
145-O GENE:GENE INTERACTIONS INFLUENCE THE OUTCOME IN ELDERLY PATIENTSR. F. Grimble, P. Andersson, J. Madden, J. Palmblad, M. Persson, I. Vedin, T. Cederholm, United Kingdom
146-O RAT LINOLEYL CO-A DESATURASE MRNA TRANCRIPTS: NUTRITIONAL REGULATION.V. Puerta, O. Martínez-Augustin, R. Salto, M. Suarez, Spain
188-O IMPACT OF INFLIXIMAB ON WEIGHT REGULATION AND LIPID METABOLISM: IMMUNO-NEUTRALIZATION OFTNFALPHA INDUCES LEPTINEMIA IN CROHN’S DISEASE.A. Van Gossum, S. Roland, S. Vermeire, E. Quertinmont, T. Gustot, C. Gervy, J. Deviere, D. Franchimont, Belgium
189-O NUTRICIA PREOP, A CARBOHYDRATE RICH CLEAR FLUID, REDUCES ISCHEMIA-REPERFUSION INDUCEDDAMAGE TO THE INTESTINAL WALL.M. C. Van Middelaar-Voskuilen, C. J. P. Van Limpt, D. E. C. Van Hoorn, K. Van Norren, A. J. M. Vriesema, H. Bouritius, Netherlands
190-O ABSORPTION OF ENTERALLY ADMINISTERED N-ACETYL-GLUTAMINE VERSUS GLUTAMINE (GLN) IN PIGSA. Arnaud, M. Ramirez, J. Baxter, A. J. Angulo, Spain
191-O EFFECT OF L-VALINE-SUPPLEMENTED TOTAL PARENTERAL NUTRITION ON THE RAT SMALL INTESTINE AFTER5-FLUOROURACIL-INDUCED ENTERITISK. Murakami, H. Doi, T. Takahashi, M. Hayashi, S. Satomi, Japan
192-O SIGNIFICANCE OF ADMINISTRATION OF FAT EMULSION:HEPATIC CHANGES IN INFANT RATS RECEIVING TOTALPARENTERAL NUTRITION WITH AND WITHOUT FATM. Oshita, H. Takehara, M. Yamaguchi, N. Ueda, S. Naitou, I. Hiraoka, S. Tashiro, Japan
193-O ORAL FEEDING MAINTENANCE AFTER INTESTINAL RESECTION: ADAPTIVE RESPONSE TO INSERT REMNANTJEJUNUM IN COLONG. B. Cornejo, Mexico
194-O THE EFFECT OF CYCLIC AND CONTINUE PARENTERAL NUTRITION ON LIVER IN A RABBIT MODEL; A COMPARATIVE ULTRASTRUCTURAL STUDYI. Kiristioglu, T. Ozekinci, I. Cavusoglu, H. Dogruyol, Turkey
195-O COMPARATIVE STUDY ON CYCLIC AND CONTINUE PARENTERAL NUTRITION ADMINISTRATION: INTESTINALPERMEABILITY AND BACTERIAL TRANSLOCATIONI. Kiristioglu, N. Guney, A. Akbunar, H. Dogruyol, Turkey
196-O DIETARY INTAKE AND ENERGY EXPENDITURE IN PATIENTS WITH LIVER CIRRHOSISL. D. Plank, L. K. Gillanders, K. Mcilroy, J. L. Mccall, E. J. Gane, New Zealand
197-O THE ROLE OF KUPFFER CELLS AFTER MAJOR LIVER SURGERYH. A. Prins, R. Holtz, P. G. Boelens, J. Diks, R. J. Nijveldt, M. Scotté, P. A. M. Van Leeuwen, Netherlands & France
198-O EARLY NUTRITIONAL ADMINISTRATION AFTER SEVERE GUT ISCHEMIA-REPERFUSION REDUCES SURVIVALK. Fukatsu, C. Ueno, Y. Hashiguchi, E. Hara, Y. Maeshima, M. Kinoshita, H. Mochizuki, H. Hiraide, Japan
199-O EVALUATION OF INTESTINAL MEDIATORS OF ENERGY HOMEOSTASIS IN A HUMAN MODELA. Omar, E. Kasim, S. Mueller, T. Schuetz, T. Kroenke, G. Brabant, H. Lochs, J. Ockenga, Germany
200-O PROBIOTIC SUPPLEMENTATION REDUCES BACTERIAL TRANSLOCATION IN THERMAL INJURYF. Gun, T. Salman, N. Gurler, S. Teko, V. Olgac, Turkey
226-O DOES CAFFEINE BLOCK THE FAVOURABLE EFFECTS OF ADENOSINE 5’-TRIPHOSPHATE (ATP) ON THE NUTRITIONAL STATUS OF CANCER PATIENTS?P. C. Dagnelie, S. Beijer, Netherlands
256-O DELETERIOUS CONSEQUENCES OF LONG TERM-PARENTERAL NUTRITION ON ARTERIAL FUNCTION IN CHILDRENV. Colomb, Y. Aggoun, C. Talbotec, France
257-O INFANT FORMULA SUPPLEMENTED WITH PROBIOTICS REDUCES GASTROINTESTINAL INFECTIONS’ RATE IN DAY CARE INFANTSZ. Weizman, G. Asli, A. Alsheikh, Israel24
LIST OF ORAL PRESENTATIONS POSTER
LIST OF ORAL PRESENTATIONS POSTER
281-O EARLY RESULTS FROM INSTITUTING AN ENHANCED RECOVERY PROGRAM AFTER COLORECTAL SURGERY ATTWO DIFFERENT SURGICAL INSTITUTIONS IN THE EUJ. Nygren, J. Hausel, O. Ljungqvist, K. Fearon On Behalf Of The Eras Group, Sweden & United Kingdom
282-O METABOLIC EFFECTS OF POSTOPERATIVE ENTERAL NUTRITION IN AN ENHANCED-RECOVERY PROTOCOLAFTER COLORECTAL SURGERYM. Soop, G. Carlson, J. Hopkinson, S. Clarke, A. Thorell, J. Nygren, O. Ljungqvist, Sweden & United Kingdom
283-O PREOPERATIVE CARBOHYDRATES REDUCE POSTOPERATIVE NAUSEA AND VOMITING AFTER ELECTIVELAPAROSCOPIC CHOLECYSTECTOMYJ. Hausel, A. Thorell, J. Nygren, O. Ljungqvist, Sweden
284-O RECOMBINANT HUMAN GROWTH HORMONE EFFECTIVELY TREATS AIDS WASTING IN HAART PATIENTSE. Svanberg, E. Daar, J. Gertner, D. Kotler, J. Melchior, G. Moyle, F. O’Brien, Switzerland & USA & France & United Kingdom
285-O HEPARIN COMPLICATION IN PARENTERAL NUTRITION VIA INTRAVENOUS PORT SYSTEME. Shang, N. Geiger, J. Sturm, Germany
286-O IMPROVED OUTCOMES WITH NUTRITION SUPPORT IN AMBULATORY ONCOLOGY PATIENTS RECEIVINGRADIOTHERAPYE. A. Isenring, S. Capra, J. Bauer, Australia
287-O EFFECTS OF AN ENHANCED RECOVERY PROGRAM AFTER COLORECTAL RESECTION ON PHYSIOLOGICALFUNCTIONJ. Nygren, S. Goldman, O. Ljungqvist, A. Thorell, Sweden
288-O EFFECT OF ENTERALY ADMINISTERED N-3 POLYUNSATURATED FATTY ACIDS ON INFLAMMATION,ANTIOXIDANTS AND OUTCOME IN ACUTE PANCREATITISN. Lasztity, J. Hamvas, E. Nemeth, T. Marosvölgyi, T. Decsi, A. Pap, M. Antal, Hungary
289-O SKELETAL FLUOROSIS: AN UNUSUAL METABOLIC BONE COMPLICATION IN HPN PATIENTSJ. Reimund, N. Afif, A. Ledit, D. Hercelin, J. Sibilia, B. Duclos, R. Baumann, France
290-O DECREASED MORTALITY AND INFECTIOUS MORBIDITY IN ADULT BURN PATIENTS WITH ENTERAL GLUTAMINESUPPLEMENTSD. R. Garrel, J. Bernier, Canada
346-O SUBJECTIVE GLOBAL ASSESSMENT AND MALNUTRITION ADVISORY GROUP TOOL FOR MALNUTRITIONSCREENING: WHICH IS BETTER FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES.M. K. Mallath, M. Shirodkar, M. Atavle, S. A. Mehta, India
347-O INFLUENCE OF SOCIAL STATE ON THE PREVALENCE OF MALNUTRITION IN HOSPITALIZED PATIENTST. Schuetz, M. Pirlich, H. J. Luebke, H. Lochs, Germany
348-O ASSOCIATION OF UNDERNUTRITION WITH MORTALITY, RE-ADMISSION AND LENGTH OF STAY IN A GROUPOF 6242 PATIENTSB. González, M. Guevara, A. Mancha, G. Fernández, F. Rodríguez, A. Díaz, I. Ulíbarri, Spain
349-O SURVIVAL ANALYSIS IN PATIENTS AFFECTED BY CHRONIC NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS IN HOME ENTERALNUTRITION (HEN)R. Galletti, E. Finocchiaro, M. Fadda, V. Mancino, M. Rivetti, B. Silli, A. Palmo, Italy
378-O NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTATION WITH A N-3 FATTY ACIDS, OLEIC ACID AND FOLIC ACID ENRICHED MILK:BENEFICIAL EFFECTS ON LIPID PROFILE IN FREE-LIVING PERIPHERAL VASCULAR DISEASE PATIENTS.J. J. Carrero, L. Baró, J. Fonolla, M. C. Gomez-Lopera, V. E. Ramos, L. M. Salmeron, E. Ros, J. Jimenez, J. J. Boza,E. López-Huertas, Spain
379-O IN VIVO MEASUREMENT OF DIETARY FIBER FERMENTATION USING METHANE DETERMINATION IN EXPIREDBREATHZ. Zadak, A. Ticha, R. Hyspler, V. Blaha, D. Solichova, L. Sobotka, M. Jelinek, Czech Republic
380-O REGULATION OF ALPHA-TOCOPHEROL ENRICHMENT IN LDLM. Hacquebard, M. Vandenbranden, J. M. Ruysschaert, Y. A. Carpentier, Belgium
25
G U I D E D P O S T E R S E S S I O N S
These abstracts will be presented as posters only
Monday, September 22nd, 2003 - From 14.15 to 15.30POSTERS PANEL N° TOPIC INVITED CHAIRMEN
002-P to 013-P 002 to 013 Poster Session 01: Physiology J. Kondrup (Denmark)and nutritional assessment Y. Berner (Israel)
014-P to 025-P 014 to 025 Poster Session 02: Physiology and C. Pichard (Switzerland)nutritional assessment N. Barak (Israel)
057-P to 058-P 026 to 038 Poster Session 05: Carbohydrates Z. Zadak (Czech Republic)& 063-P to 073-P & Fatty acids, lipids and obesity S. Klein (USA)
086-P to 090-P 039 to 051 Poster Session 07: Fatty acids, lipids and obesity A. Ciechanover (Israel)& 100-P to 107-P & Protein and amino acid metabolism E. Volpi (USA)
129-P to 140-P 060 to 071 Poster Session 09: Vitamins, trace M. Berger (Switzerland)elements, minerals D. Varon (Israel)
147-P to 158-P 078 to 089 Poster Session 10: Cell biology, R. F. Grimble (United Kingdom)nutrients and genes J. Bar-Tana (Israel)
171-P to 182-P 090 to 101 Poster Session 12: Critically ill M. Hiesmayr (Austria)R. Suojaranta-Ylinen (Finland)
208-P to 219-P 102 to 113 Poster Session 14: Liver and Gastrointestinal tract M. Leon-Sanz (Spain)A. Buchman (USA)
233-P to 243-P 114 to 125 Poster Session 16: Malignancies A. Van Gossum (Belgium)& 393-P L. Pironi (Italy)
258-P to 268-P 126 to 136 Poster Session 18: Pediatrics O. Goulet (France)R. Shamir (Israel)
291-P to 302-P 147 to 158 Poster Session 20: Treatment and outcome L. Harsanyi (Hungary)R. Reifen (Israel)
303-P to 313-P 159 to 169 Poster Session 21: Treatment and outcome M. E. Ferreyra (Peru)M. Rubin (Israel)
338-P to 345-P 170 to 177 Poster Session 24: Treatment and outcome & S. Allison (United Kingdom)& 350-P to 353-P & 182 to 185 Nutritional epidemiology, communication J. Attal-Singer (Israel)
354-P to 365-P 186 to 197 Poster Session 25: Nutritional epidemiology, M. Plauth (Germany)communication G. Rozen (Israel)
26
POSTERS
POSTERSG U I D E D P O S T E R S E S S I O N S
These abstracts will be presented as posters only
Tuesday, September 23rd, 2003 - From 14.15 to 15.30POSTERS PANEL N° TOPIC INVITED CHAIRMEN
026-P to 036-P 001 to 011 Poster Session 03: Physiology C. Jonkers-Schuitema (Netherlands)and nutritional assessment E. Grozowski (Israel)
037-P to 049-P 012 to 023 Poster Session 04: Physiology D. Waitzberg (Brazil)and nutritional assessment N. Vaisman (Israel)
074-P to 085-P 035 to 046 Poster Session 06: Fatty acids, lipids and obesity Y. Carpentier (Belgium)M. Rubin (Israel)
108-P to 120-P 056 to 068 Poster Session 08: Protein M. Holecek (Czech Republic)and amino acid metabolism Y. Levy (Israel)
159-P to 170-P 069 to 080 Poster Session 11: Cell biology, nutrients R. J. Deckelbaum (USA)and genes J. Hirschberg (Israel)
183-P to 187-P 081 to 085 Poster Session 13: Critically ill L. Cynober (France)& 201-P to 207-P & 099 to 105 & Liver and Gastrointestinal tract I. Grintescu (Romania)
220-P to 232-P 106 to 118 Poster Session 15: Liver and Gastrointestinal M. Gassull (Spain)tract & Malignancies S. Kilicturgay (Turkey)
244-P to 255-P 119 to 131 Poster Session 17: Malignancies & Treatment F. Hammarqvist (Sweden)& 394-P and outcome D. A. August (USA)
269-P to 280-P 134 to 145 Poster Session 19: Pediatrics Z. Zadik (Israel)O. Hernell (Sweden)
314-P to 325-P 146 to 157 Poster Session 22: Treatment and outcome Y. Berner (Israel)D. Vranesic (Croatia)
326-P to 337-P 158 to 169 Poster Session 23: Treatment and outcome V. Colomb (France)N. Barak (Israel)
366-P to 377-P 170 to 181 Poster Session 26: Nutritional epidemiology, I. Mustafa (Indonesia)communication D. Nitzan Kalutski (Israel)
381-P to 392-P 185 to 196 Poster Session 27: Nutritional pharmacology R. Radziwill (Germany)Z. Gruenewald (Israel)
27
PHYSIOLOGY AND NUTRITIONAL ASSESSMENT
002-P COMPARISON OF DUAL ENERGY X-RAY ABSORPTIOMETRY (DXA) WITH BIOELECTRICAL IMPEDANCEANALYSISS (BIA) IN OBESE WOMENL. Genton, D. Hans, V. L. Karsegard, U. G. Kyle, D. O. Slosman, C. Pichard, USA & Switzerland
003-P APPENDICULAR SKELETAL MUSCLE MASS (ASMM) PERCENTILES IN 7489 HEALTHY ADULTS AGED 18-98YEARS DETERMINED BY BIOELECTRICAL IMPEDANCE ANALYSIS (BIA)U. G. Kyle, Y. M. Dupertuis, C. A. Raguso, D. Hans, C. Pichard, Switzerland
004-P CONVENTIONAL BIOELECTRIC IMPEDANCE ANALYSIS (BIA) AND BIOELECTRIC IMPEDANCE VECTOR ANALYSIS(BIVA) IN HOME PARENTERAL NUTRITION (HPN)L. Pironi, C. Guidetti, G. Spinucci, F. Paganelli, C. Merli, M. Miglioli, Italy
005-P THREE-YEAR VARIATIONS OF BODY COMPOSITION IN ELDERLY SUBJECTS: A PRELIMINARY REPORTC. A. Raguso, A. Paoloni-Giacobino, C. E. Roynette, U. G. Kyle, C. Pichard, Switzerland
006-P GENEVA AND NHANES BIOELECTRICAL IMPEDANCE ANALYSIS (BIA) EQUATIONS, COMPARED TO DUAL-ENERGY X-RAY ABSORPTIOMETRY (DXA), TO PREDICT FAT-FREE MASS (FFM)U. G. Kyle, D. Hans, L. Genton, C. Pichard, Switzerland
007-P IS BIOELECTRICAL IMPEDANCE ANALYSIS A RELIABLE METHOD FOR DETERMINING BODY COMPOSITIONAND ENERGY DEMAND UNDER DAY-TO-DAY CLINICAL WORK CONDITIONS?P. Thul, W. Breuel, Germany
008-P LONGITUDINAL FOLLOW-UP OF BODY COMPOSITION AFTER BONE MARROW TRANSPLANT (BMT)U. G. Kyle, C. Helg, R. Rizzoli, D. Hans, D. O. Slosman, C. Pichard, Switzerland
009-P BODY COMPOSITION DIFFERENCES IN PATIENTS ON HOME MECHANICAL VENTILATION (HMV) COMPAREDTO HEALTHY VOLUNTEERS DURING 1 Y FOLLOW-UPU. G. Kyle, C. A. Raguso, J. Janssens, C. Pichard, Switzerland
010-P BIOELECTRICAL IMPEDANCE AND INDIVIDUAL CHARACTERISTICS AS PROGNOSTIC FACTORS IN POST-OPERATIVE COMPLICATIONSM. G. Barbosa E Silva, M. G. Barbosa E Silva, A. J. D. Barros, Brazil
011-P UTILITY OF THE EXTRACELLULAR AND THE BODY CELLULAR MASS DETERMINATION BY BIOELECTRICALIMPEDANCE IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTSM. Moukas, G. Dali, A. Amygdalou, A. Naxaki, A. Katagi, I. Liosis, M. P. Vassiliou, K. Mandragos, Greece
012-P EVOLUTION OF BODY COMPOSITION DURING WEIGHT LOSS IN ELDERLY MALNOURISHED PATIENTS: A LONGITUDINAL STUDYR. Al-Jaouni, S. M. Schneider, J. Filippi, K. Arab, X. Hébuterne, France
013-P FAT MASS BY SKINFOLD THIKNESS VS BIOELECTRICAL IMPEDANCE ANALYSISC. Puiggrós, R. Molinos, M. Rivas, D. Ortíz, C. Romero, C. Pérez-Portabella, M. Planas, Spain
014-P THE PREDICTIVE VALIDITY OF THE MALNUTRITION UNIVERSAL SCREENING TOOL (MUST) WITH REGARD TOMORTALITY AND LENGTH OF STAY IN ELDERLY INPATIENTSC. L. King, M. Elia, M. A. Stroud, R. J. Stratton, United Kingdom
015-P SEARCHING FOR A NUTRITIONAL SCREENING AND ASSESSMENT TOOL!P. Ravasco, F. Mourão, D. Amado, M. Camilo, Portugal
016-P RESTING ENERGY EXPENDITURE OF ELDERLY PATIENTS IN ACUTE HOSPITAL SETTINGSN. Barak, E. Allonso-Wall, M. D. Sitrin, Israel & USA
017-P LONGITUDINAL TOTAL BODY POTASSIUM CHANGES IN HEALTHY ELDERLY PEOPLE: PRELIMINARY RESULTSC. A. Raguso, C. E. Roynette, A. Paoloni-Giacobino, L. Genton, C. Pichard, Switzerland
018-P NUTRITION WEIGHS ON QUALITY OF LIFE IN HAEMODIALYSIS PATIENTSP. Ravasco, P. Raimundo, V. Proença, M. Camilo, Portugal
019-P NUTRITIONAL RISK ASSESSMENT IN MAJOR ELECTIVE ABDOMINAL SURGERY PATIENTSI. Grecu, L. Mirea, M. Nicolau, I. Grintescu, Romania
020-P EFFECTS OF ENTERAL NUTRITION ON SERUM NUTRITIONAL MARKERS OF 161 HOSPITAL PATIENTS: A PRELIMINARY ANALYSISN. Maisonneuve, C. A. Raguso, S. Gottraux, C. Pichard, Switzerland
021-P VALIDATION OF MID ARM ANTHROPOMETRY IN HOSPITALIZED MEDICAL PATIENTSS. T. Burden, E. R. Stoppard, A. J. Makin, J. L. Shaffer, C. Todd, United Kingdom
022-P A RAPID SCREENING TOOL FOR DETECTING MALNUTRITIONA. Van Gossum, L. Drumel, C. Montoisy, M. Arvanitaki, S. Vereecken, Belgium
023-P THE MINI NUTRITIONAL ASSESSMENT IS EFFECTIVE IN THE GROUP OF ELDERLY PATIENTS SUFFERING FROM ALZHEIMER DISEASEL. Sobotka, M. Navratilova, R. Hyspler, Z. Zadak, Czech Republic
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024-P BIOCHEMICAL PARAMETERS FOR THE ASSESSMENT OF MALNUTRITION AND FOR MONITORING NUTRITIONINTERVENTION IN ANOREXIA NERVOSAM. Nardi, A. Lion, L. Di Pascoli, A. Favaro, P. Santonastaso, D. Milazzo, E. Zola, R. Crecca, L. Caregaro, Italy
025-P IS BODY MASS INDEX AN APPROPRIATE MEASURE OF NUTRITIONAL STATUS IN PATIENTS WITH HEARTFAILURE OR DILATED CARDIOMYOPATHY?S. A. Hood, United Kingdom
026-P IS PHYSICAL ACTIVITY MEASURED BY ACCELEROMETER USEFUL AS A PARAMETER OF NUTRITIONALASSESSMENT?T. Kimura, Y. Inoue, S. Fujita, M. Yoshikawa, T. Ito, H. Matsuda, Japan
027-P COMBINED PHYSICAL AND MENTAL FUNCTION PROFILE IS A BETTER MEASURE OF RESPONSE THAN BODYMASS IN PATIENTS ON NUTRITIONAL SUPPORTA. Martinez-Riquelme, J. K. Rawlings, K. Bjarnason, J. Field, S. P. Allison, United Kingdom
028-P BODY MASS INDEX IS A PREDICTOR OF MORTALITY IN SUBJECTS WITH DEMENTIA AND MILD COGNITIVEIMPAIRMENTG. Faxén-Irving, T. Cederholm, H. Basun, Sweden
029-P PROGNOSTIC VALUE OF NUTRITIONAL CRITERIA ON SURVIVAL IN NEUROLOGYD. Seguy, P. Devos, A. Destée, M. Romon, France
030-P MUSCLE MASS DEPLETION PREDICTS MEDICAL COMPLICATIONS IN ANOREXIA NERVOSAL. Di Pascoli, E. Zola, A. Lion, D. Milazzo, M. Nardi, G. Boffo, F. Francini, L. Caregaro, Italy
031-P NEW SCREENING TOOL FOR HOSPITAL UNDERNUTRITION: A STUDY OF PREVALENCE IN 6242 PATIENTSM. Guevara, B. González, A. Mancha, G. Fernández, F. Rodríguez, A. Díaz, I. Mascarell, I. Ulíbarri, Spain
032-P A MODEL FOR EVALUATING MALNUTRITION RISK IN CANCER PATIENTS IN THE BEGINNING OFONCOLOGICAL TREATMENT PLANNINGH. Viitala, T. Lehtinen, T. Peltola, U. Siljamäki, Finland
033-P EFFECT OF RECALLED WEIGHT AND HEIGHT ON MALNUTRITION RISKR. J. Stratton, R. Dixon, D. Longmore, M. Stroud, M. Elia, United Kingdom
034-P CONCURRENT VALIDITY OF A NEWLY DEVELOPED MALNUTRITION UNIVERSAL SCREENING TOOL (MUST)R. J. Stratton, D. Longmore, M. Elia, United Kingdom
035-P PREDICTION OF STATURE BY KNEE HEIGHT AND AGE IN PORTUGUESE ELDERLY PATIENTSJ. R. Correia, C. A. Martins, O. B. M. P. Oliveira, T. F. Amaral, Portugal
036-P VALIDITY OF REFERRED WEIGHT BY HOSPITAL IN-PATIENTST. F. Amaral, I. Paiva, Portugal
037-P EFFICIENCY OF MST - MALNUTRITION SCREENING TOOL - IN ELDERLY HOSPITALISED PATIENTSJ. R. Correia, C. A. Martins, T. F. Amaral, Portugal
038-P INCREASED RESTING ENERGY EXPENDITURE IN SUBJECTS WITH EMERY-DREIFUSS MUSCULAR DYSTROPHYN. Vaisman, Y. Nevo, Israel
039-P CORRECTION OF ANEMIA IN PATIENTS WITH CONGESTIVE HEART FAILURE INCREASES RESTING ENERGYEXPENDITUREN. Vaisman, D. Silverberg, D. Wexler, A. Iaina, Israel
040-P LATE NUTRITIONAL ASSESSMENT IN HOSPITALIZED PATIENTS IS ASSOCIATED WITH MODERATE OR SEVERENUTRITIONAL DEPLETION, DETERMINED BY NUTRITIONAL RISK INDEX (NRI)U. G. Kyle, S. M. Schneider, X. Hebuterne, C. Pichard, Switzerland & France
041-P DETERMINATION OF RESTING ENERGY EXPENDITURE BY VO2 ALONE IN NORMAL AND OBESE SUBJECTSJ. Attal-Singer, D. Dvir, P. Singer, Israel
042-P IMPACT OF VISCERAL PROTEIN MEASUREMENT ON CLINICAL OUTCOME IN PATIENTS WITHGASTROINTESTINAL TRACT SURGERYT. Horbach, F. Josse, J. Krause, S. Dziub, C. Wagner, Germany
043-P EVALUATION OF MUSCLE FUNCTION TO DIAGNOSE CATABOLISMN. Bracke, Germany
044-P ANOREXIA AND SERUM LEPTIN LEVELS IN HEMODIALYSIS PATIENTSM. Muscaritoli, M. Bossola, G. Luciani, N. Panocchia, C. Gianni, F. Rossi Fanelli, Italy
045-P EFFECTS OF CROHN’S DISEASE ON MUSCLE PERFORMANCEJ. Wiroth, J. Fillippi, R. Al-Jaouni, S. Bermon, S. Schneider, X. Hébuterne, France
046-P PROGNOSTIC INFLAMMATORY AND NUTRITIONAL INDEX (PINI) IN NON-CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS WITH TOTAL PARENTERAL NUTRITION (TPN)R. Burgos, G. Francisco, P. Chacón, C. Puiggrós, M. Planas, Spain
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048-P THE CORRELATION BETWEEN NUTRITIONAL STATUS WITH SUBJECTIVE GLOBAL ASSESSMENT AND SERUMALBUMIN CONCENTRATION IN ELDERLY PATIENTSA. Altan, A. Turkmen, N. Turgut, S. Kamali, A. Ersoy, Turkey
049-P THE GLYCEMIC INDEX (GI) OF STANDARD AND DIABETES-SPECIFIC CLINICAL NUTRITION PRODUCTSJ. D. E. Van Drunen, Z. Hofman, H. Kuipers, Netherlands
CARBOHYDRATES
057-P POSTPRANDIAL RESPONSE AND GLYCAEMIC INDEX (GI) OF DIABETES-SPECIFIC AND STANDARD CLINICALNUTRITION PRODUCTSJ. D. E. Van Drunen, Z. Hofman, H. Kuipers, Netherlands
058-P CONTRIBUTION OF DIFFERENT ANIMAL MODELS TO THE UNDERSTANDING OF THE ROLE OF NOVELINGREDIENTS IN THE MANAGEMENT OF DIABETESF. Moya, R. Rueda, J. M. Lopez-Pedrosa, Spain
FATTY ACIDS, LIPIDS AND OBESITY
063-P VLDL-TRIGLYCERIDE (TG) SECRETION IS DIRECTLY RELATED TO BODY MASS INDEX IN MEN BUT NOT INWOMENJ. C. Mccrea, B. Mittendorfer, B. W. Patterson, S. Klein, USA
064-P POSTPRANDIAL MARKERS OF INFLAMMATION AND OXIDATION FOLLOWING DIFFERENT FATTY MEALS(MEDITERRANEAN VS. WESTERN)S. Blum, M. Aviram, O. Zinder, Y. Levy, Israel
065-P FATTY ACID (FA) PATTERNS IN PLASMA AND IN LDL OF 300 HEALTHY MALE VOLUNTEERS FROM 3EUROPEAN COUNTRIESI. Sundl, M. Maritschnegg, S. Wuga, J. M. Roob, M. Preinsberger, G. Godas, E. Marktfelder, M. Brandolini, D. Hiller,J. Ribalta, E. Rock, B. M. Winklhofer-Roob, Austria & Spain & France
066-P SERUM LEPTIN: BASAL AND CIRCADIAN RHYTHM AMONG PURGING EATING DISORDERS PATIENTSB. De Mateo, J. L. Velasco, C. Juarros, A. Miján, Spain
067-P SERUM PHOSPHOLIPID FATTY ACID PROFILE AND DIETARY INTAKE IN A MEDITERRANEAN ADULTPOPULATION WITH CYSTIC FIBROSISG. Olveira, C. Olveira, A. Dorado, A. Cuesta-Muñoz, G. Rojo-Martínez, M. Beltrán, L. Garrido, A. Muñoz-Aguilar, F. J. C. Soriguer, Spain
068-P DOES DIETARY ASSESSMENT OF FISH INTAKE RELATE TO INCORPORATION OF N-3 FATTY ACIDS INGRANULOCYTES AND ADIPOSE TISSUE?L. J. Bjerregaard, I. V. Aardestrup, J. H. Christensen, E. B. Schmidt, Denmark
069-P COMPARATIVE STUDY BETWEEN TOTAL PARENTERAL NUTRITION (TPN) AND NO NUTRITIONAL SUPPORT INPERIOPERATIVE BARIATRIC SURGERYM. J. Martinez, M. A. Martinez, M. J. Morales, P. Parada, I. Otero, I. Maruri, N. Martinez, E. Casal, Spain
070-P CHOLESTEROL IMPROVES THE UTILIZATION OF PARENTERAL LIPIDW. Druml, M. Fischer, Austria
071-P EFFICACY AND SAFETY OF AN OLIVE OIL-BASED INTRAVENOUS FAT EMULSION IN ADULT HPN PATIENTSJ. Reimund, Y. Arondel, G. Pina, C. D. Muller, R. Baumann, B. Duclos, France
072-P ANTIOXIDANT AND HYPOLIPIDEMIC EFFECTS OF A RED GRAPE JUICE SUPPLEMENT IN HEMODIALYSISPATIENTSM. A. Lasunción, P. Castilla, R. Echarri, H. Ortega, J. Teruel, Spain
073-P ENTERAL FISH OIL, BORAGE OIL AND ANTIOXIDANTS IN PATIENTS WITH ACUTE LUNG INJURY (ALI)M. Tehila, L. Gibstein, D. Gordgi, J. D. Cohen, M. Shapira, P. Singer, Israel
074-P SEVERE OBESITY AND A MULTIDIMENSIONAL PATIENT-ORIENTED MANAGEMENTD. Ferrari, B. Saber, S. Zago, P. Maffeis, M. Labate, D. Agagliati, E. Bauducco, R. Cavagna, L. Martignone, G. M. Rovera, Italy
075-P NORMAL METABOLIC PROFILE IN SEVERELY OBESE PATIENTSJ. Faintuch, C. Oliveira, A. Rascovski, M. Matsuda, C. Bresciani, A. Halpern, J. Rodrigues, Brazil
076-P PSYCHOLOGICAL FRAGILITY OF OBESE WOMENM. M. Silva, A. R. Silva, V. F. Matsuoka, J. Faintuch, B. Zilberstein, J. Gama-Rodrigues, Brazil
077-P THE EFFECT OF A FIBER RICH DIETARY PRODUCT USED FOR THE DIETARY TREATMENT OF OBESE ADULTWOMEN ON BLOOD LIPIDS AND SOME MINERAL LEVELSA. Ozenoglu, N. Caneroglu, G. Can, H. Hatemi, Turkey
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POSTERS
078-P PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPORTANCE OF BODY IMAGE IN OBESE WOMENM. M. Silva, A. L. Ferreira, J. Faintuch, M. Maio, C. C. Bresciani, J. Gama-Rodrigues, B. Zilberstein, Brazil
079-P SLEEP ABNORMALITIES IN MORBID OBESITYM. M. Silva, V. F. Matsuoka, A. R. Silva, R. Reimão, J. Faintuch, B. Zilberstein, J. Gama-Rodrigues, Brazil
080-P A SINGLE CENTER EXPERIENCE IN MANAGEMENT OF ANASTOMOTIC STRICTURES AFTER ROUX-EN-Y GASTRIC BYPASS (RGB)A. Ukleja, M. Cruz-Correa, G. Bonner, S. Szomstein, R. Rosenthal, R. Pimentel, USA
081-P SEVERE PROTEIN-CALORIE MALNUTRITION AFTER BARIATRIC INTERVENTIONJ. Faintuch, M. Matsuda, M. Cruz, M. Silva, M. Dias, C. Oliveira, A. Rascovski, Brazil
082-P SRVG VS. GASTRIC BANDING: WEIGHT LOSS IN MORBID OBESE PATIENTSM. Krakovski, S. Susmallian, B. Shalev, I. Charuzi, M. Muggia-Sullam, Israel
083-P HALF-BODY DUAL ENERGY X-RAY ABSORPTIOMETRY (DXA) PREDICTS WHOLE BODY COMPOSITION (WBC)IN OBESE PATIENTSL. Genton, D. Hans, U. G. Kyle, V. L. Karsegard, D. O. Slosman, C. Pichard, USA & Switzerland
084-P DETECTION OF CLINICAL TROUBLES AND BIOLOGICAL NUTRITIONAL INSUFFICIENCIES IS IMPORTANT AFTER BARIATRIC SURGERYJ. C. Desport, M. Sodji, K. Makabakayele, P. M. Preux, B. Descottes, France
085-P FACTORS IMPLICATED IN SURGICAL COMPLICATIONS AND BAROS INDEX AFTER BARIATRIC SURGERYJ. C. Desport, 0. Marmottant, M. Sodji, P. M. Preux, B. Descottes, France
086-P PARENTERAL FISH OIL SUPPLEMENTATION IN PATIENTS WITH ABDOMINAL SEPSISI. Grecu, L. Mirea, I. Grintescu, Romania
087-P LIPID SUPPLEMENTED DIET GIVEN TO RATS DURING PREGNANCY ENHANCE THE LEVEL OF 6 DESATURASEMRNA LEVEL OF IN LIVER OF DEVELOPING EMBRIOSN. Vaisman, A. Leikin-Frenkel, Israel
088-P SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF THE EFFECT OF LIPID EMULSIONS ON IMMUNOLOGICAL FUNCTIONM. Baumgartner, B. Wessner, E. Roth, M. Hiesmayr, Austria
089-P LDL OXIDATION BY MYELOPEROXIDASE: PROTECTION BY VITAMIN CS. Blaze, O. Scruel, N. Moguilevski, I. E. Dupont, Y. A. Carpentier, Belgium
090-P REACTIVE OXYGEN SPECIES (ROS) IN THE PATHOGENESIS OF ACUTE PANCREATITIS (AP) - CLINICAL TRIALF. Musil, Z. Zadak, D. Solichova, R. Hyspler, L. Sobotka, J. Manak, M. Kaska, Czech Republic
PROTEIN AND AMINO ACID METABOLISM
100-P THE EFFECT OF A GLUTAMATE LOAD ON SYMPTOMS OF THE CHINESE RESTAURANT SYNDROMEE. P. A. Rutten, M. P. K. J. Engelen, N. E. P. Deutz, E. F. M. Wouters, A. M. W. J. Schols, Netherlands
101-P THE EFFECT OF REPEATED INGESTION OF GLUTAMATE OR GLUTAMINE ON PLASMA GLUTAMATE LEVELSE. P. A. Rutten, M. P. K. J. Engelen, A. M. W. J. Schols, E. F. M. Wouters, N. E. P. Deutz, Netherlands
102-P PLASMA GLUTAMINE RESPONSE TO ENTERAL AND PARENTERAL L-ALANYL-L-GLUTAMINE IN PRE-OPERATIVEPATIENTSP. G. Boelens, J. R. M. Van Der Sijp, N. E. P. Deutz, C. Van Schaik, R. Manoliu, P. A. M. Van Leeuwen, Netherlands
103-P ARGININE METABOLISM IN HUMAN WOUNDS: ACUTE VERSUS CHRONIC WOUNDSI. B. J. G. Debats, M. N. E. Deutz, W. W. D. Boeckx, R. R. R. Hulst Vd, Netherlands
104-P THE CIRCADIAN VARIABILITY IN URINARY UREA NITROGEN EXCRETION AND SUBSTRATE UTILIZATION INHEALTHY SUBJECTS AND DIABETIC PATIENTSP. Wohl, T. Pelikánová, P. Wohl, Czech Republic
105-P EXPERIMENTAL DIETS FOR THE PREVENTION OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF FAMILIAL AMYOTROPHIC LATERALSCLEROSISM. Sculati, D. Alimonti, D. Curti, C. Roggi, M. Ceroni, Italy
106-P HANDLING OF ASYMMETRICAL DIMETHYLARGININE (ADMA) AND SYMMETRICAL DIMETHYLARGININE(SDMA) BY THE RAT KIDNEY UNDER BASAL CONDITIONS AND ENDOTOXEMIAR. J. Nijveldt, T. Teerlink, H. A. Prins, A. A. Van Lambalgen, M. P. C. Siroen, J. A. Rauwerda, P. A. M. Van Leeuwen, Netherlands
107-P GUT AND LIVER HANDLING OF ASYMMETRICAL (ADMA) AND SYMMETRICAL (SDMA) DIMETHYLARGININE IN THE RAT UNDER BASAL CONDITIONS AND DURING ENDOTOXEMIAR. J. Nijveldt, T. Teerlink, A. A. Van Lambalgen, M. P. C. Siroen, J. A. Rauwerda, P. A. M. Van Leeuwen, Netherlands
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108-P INFLUENCE OF PROTEASOME INHIBITORS (MG132, ZL3VS, ADAAHX3L3VS) ON PROTEIN METABOLISM IN INCUBATED RAT SKELETAL MUSCLEJ. Kadlcikova, M. Holecek, R. Safranek, I. Tilser, Czech Republic
109-P THE DUMAS METHOD FOR THE TOTAL URINARY NITROGEN EVALUATIONF. Francini, R. De Toni, L. Caregaro, L. Di Pascoli, G. Bucciante, Italy
110-P EFFECTS OF FREE L-GLUTAMINE VERSUS L-ALANYL-L-GLUTAMINE ON PLASMA ARGININE CONCENTRATIONSAND ORGAN FLUXES IN MICE UNDERGOING SURGERYP. G. Boelens, P. A. M. Van Leeuwen, P. B. Soeters, P. Fürst, C. H. C. Dejong, N. E. P. Deutz, Netherlands & Germany
111-P CITRULLINE PRODUCTION FROM THE PORTALLY DRAINED VISCERA IS GREATER AFTER FREE L-GLUTAMINETHAN AFTER L-ALANYL-L-GLUTAMINE ADMINISTRATION IN MICE UNDERGOING SURGERYP. G. Boelens, P. A. M. Van Leeuwen, P. B. Soeters, P. Fürst, C. H. C. Dejong, N. E. P. Deutz, Netherlands & Germany
112-P ORNITHINE PATHWAY STIMULATED IN HUMAN WOUND HEALING DURING ARGININE SUPPLETIONI. B. J. G. Debats, N. E. P. Deutz, E. Vd Hogen, W. D. Boeckx, R. R. W. Vd Hulst, Netherlands
113-P INFLUENCE OF GLUTAMINE-STARVATION OF MONOCYTES ON NORMAL AND STRESS-INDUCED AMINO ACID UPTAKER. Oehler, M. Eliasen, J. Pollheimer, E. Roth, Austria
114-P EVALUATION OF A NEW AMINO ACID (AA) SOLUTION FOR PARENTERAL NUTRITION (PN) IN ENDOTOXEMICRATSC. Loï, G. Kana, M. C. Blanc, C. Genthon, L. Cynober, France
115-P PERIPHERAL VENOUS TOLERANCE OF 20% ALANYL-GLUTAMINE DIPEPTIDEH. G. Kulkarni, D. H. Nandal, J. Pardeshi, A. Parulkar, R. Gopinath, V. Nagendranath, V. Manimala Rao, India
116-P PRROFILE OF AMINOACIDS (AA) AND THE LEVEL OF TOTAL AND FREE CARNITINE IN PLASMA OF CHRONICPERITONEAL DIALYSIS (CPD) PATIENTSW. J. Lysiak-Szydlowska, J. Luty, M. Lichodziejewska-Niemierko, B. Rutkowski, Poland
117-P EFFECTS OF PARENTERAL ALANINE-GLUTAMINE SUPPLEMENTATION ON THE RAT NUTRITIONAL CONDITIONJ. J. Ortiz De Urbina, F. Jorquera, C. Villares, J. Culebras, P. Gonzalez, J. Gonzalez-Gallego, M. J. Tuñon, Spain
118-P INTESTAMIN AND ACUTE PANCREATITISW. M. Scheppach, Germany
119-P PLASMA AMINO ACIDS PROFILE IN ADULT SHORT BOWEL SYNDROME: RELATION TO NUTRITIONAL ANDDIGESTIVE PARAMETERSS. Alibay Gandjee, P. Crenn, S. K. Lim, P. Pernet, F. Joly, J. Oliary, B. Messing, France
120-P PREVENTION OF MUSCLE FUNCTION IMPAIRMENT BY GLUTAMINE SUPPLEMENTATION DURING SYSTEMICINFLAMMATIONA. Maglara, A. Mcardle, R. D. Griffiths, M. J. Jackson, United Kingdom
VITAMINS, TRACE ELEMENTS, MINERALS
129-P THE ABSORPTION OF IRON BISGLYCINATE (IBC) AND FERRUS CALCIUM CITRATE (ICC) IS EQUAL USING ANIRON ORAL TOLERANCE TESTI. Chermesh, R. R. E. Eliakim, Israel
130-P SHORT TERM MICRONUTRIENT SUPPLEMENTATION IN OLDER INSTITUTIONALISED PEOPLE DOES NOTIMPROVE THE RESPONSE TO INFLUENZA VACCINE - A RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIALS. J. Allsup, A. Shenkin, M. A. Gosney, S. Taylor, W. Taylor, M. Hammond, M. C. Zambon, United Kingdom
131-P LATENT COPPER DEFICIENCY IN ENTERAL NUTRITIONY. Ito, T. Ando, T. Nabeshima, Japan
132-P TISSUE ZINC, COPPER, MANGANESE AND IRON OF FOUR HOME PARENTERAL NUTRITION (HPN) PATIENTSL. J. Howard, C. Ashley, D. Lyon, A. Shenkin, USA
133-P CU, SE, AND ZN BALANCES IN CRITICALLY ILL DURING CONTINUOUS VENOVENOUS HEMODIAFILTRATION(CVVHDF)M. M. Berger, A. Shenkin, M. D. Bollmann, J. P. Revelly, M. C. Cayeux, E. Roberts, R. L. Chiolero, Switzerland & United Kingdom
134-P THE EFFECT OF MICRONUTRIENT SUPPLEMENTATION ON MOOD IN OLDER INSTITUTIONALISED PEOPLE - A RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIALM. F. Hammond, M. Gosney, S. Allsup, W. Taylor, A. Shenkin, United Kingdom
135-P DIAGNOSIS AND DEFINITION OF MAGNESIUM DEPLETION IN PATIENTS WITH GASTROINTESTINAL DISEASEA. Martinez-Riquelme, S. R. Morley, J. K. Rawlings, D. J. Hosking, S. P. Allison, United Kingdom
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POSTERS
136-P HYPOMAGNESAEMIA IN GASTROINTESTINAL FAILURE: CORRELATION TO SYMPTOMS, SINGS AND CALCIUMHOMEOSTASISA. Martinez-Riquelme, S. R. Morley, J. K. Rawlings, D. J. Hosking, United Kingdom
137-P CORRECTION OF HYPOMAGNESAEMIA IN GASTROINTESTINAL FAILURE USING SELF-ADMINISTEREDSUBCUTANEOUS FLUID AT HOMEA. Martinez-Riquelme, S. R. Morley, J. K. Rawlings, D. J. Hosking, J. Kendall, S. P. Allison, United Kingdom
138-P SELF-ADMINISTERED SUBCUTANEOUS FLUID INFUSION AT HOME (HSCF) IN THE MANAGEMENT OF GI FAILUREA. Martinez-Riquelme, J. K. Rawlings, S. Morley, K. Bjarnason, J. Field, R. Cunliffe, D. Lobo, S. P. Allison, United Kingdom
139-P IS THERE A ROLE OF KIDNEY FUNCTION IN VITAMIN E METABOLISM ?J. M. Roob, R. Brigelius-Flohe, B. M. Winklhofer-Roob, Austria & Germany
140-P PLASMA AND LDL CONCENTRATIONS OF VITAMIN A, E, C, AND CAROTENOIDS IN 300 HEALTHY MALEVOLUNTEERS OF 3 EUROPEAN COUNTRIESI. Sundl, M. Maritschnegg, A. Meinitzer, S. Wuga, J. M. Roob, B. Tiran, E. Rock, J. Ribalta, B. M. Winklhofer-Roob,Austria & France & Spain
CELL BIOLOGY, NUTRIENTS AND GENES
147-P NUCLEOSIDES INHIBIT THE PRODUCTION OF INTERLEUKIN 8 BY CACO 2 CELLSO. Martínez-Augustin, F. Sanchez De Medina, V. Puerta, M. Suarez, A. Walker, I. R. Sanderson, Spain & USA & United Kingdom
148-P MAJOR SURGICAL STRESS AFFECTS THE CIRCADIAN HPER2 EXPRESSION AND SLEEPING TIMET. Azama, M. Yano, S. Nishimura, S. Takiguchi, T. Yasuda, H. Iwanaga, Y. Fujiwara, M. Monden, Japan
149-P DIETARY CONTROL OF GHRELIN IN THE RATM. Vallejo-Cremades, Spain
150-P GPX1 KNOCKOUT REDUCES THE CYTOKINE RESPONSE AND PREVENTS LIVER INJURY THROUGHINDUCTION OF HSP70 AFTER 70% PARTIAL HEPATECTOMYY. Oka, N. Iwakuma, A. Kaibara, N. Ishibashi, K. Shirouzu, Japan
151-P ORAL OMEGA-3 POLYUNSATURATED FATTY ACIDS (N3PUFA) AND ARGININE SUPPLEMENTATION MODULATEPERITONEAL RESIDENT CELL NUCLEAR FACTOR KAPPA B (NFKAPPAB) ACTIVITYW. Kang, H. Saito, Japan
152-P EFFECT OF ARGININE ON NO AND CHEMOKINES (IL-8, MIG, IP-10) PRODUCTION AND MRNA EXPRESSIONIN THE HUMAN INTESTINAL EPITHELIAL CELL LINE HCT-8R. Marion, S. Lemoulan, P. Ducrotté, P. Déchelotte, France
153-P RAPID INTRAVENOUS INFUSION CAN ALTER THE CIRCADIAN EXPRESSION OF RPER2 IN THE SCN BUT NOTIN THE LIVERH. Iwanaga, M. Yano, T. Azama, M. Monden, Japan
154-P AMINO ACID CONTROL OF THE HUMAN GLYCERALDEHYDE 3-PHOSPHATE DEHYDROGENASE GENETRANSCRIPTION IN HEPATOCYTE IS MEDIATED BY C/EBPS. Claeyssens, C. Gangneux, T. Aki, A. Lavoinne, J. Salier, France & Japan
155-P LEPTIN-RECEPTOR DETECTION ON BREAST HUMAN CARCINOMAF. F. Caldefie-Chézet, M. M. Guerry, M. M. De Latour, F. F. Penault-Llorca, J. J. Guillot, M. M. P. Vasson, France
156-P LACK OF ENTERAL NUTRITION BLUNTS THE NFKAPPAB ACTIVATION IN PERITONEAL RESIDENT CELLSC. Ueno, K. Fukatsu, W. Kang, Y. Hashiguchi, E. Hara, H. Nagayoshi, H. Saito, H. Hiraide, H. Mochizuki, Japan
157-P GOAT’S MILK OLIGOSACCHARIDES MODULATE MUCIN AND TREFOIL FACTORS PRODUCTION IN THE MUCUSPRODUCING INTESTINAL CEL LINE HT29/MTX O. Martinez-Augustin, V. Puerta, A. Martínez-Férez, L. Baró, E. López-Huertas, M. Suarez, Spain
158-P HUMAN MONOCYTES/MACROPHAGES ACTIVATION STATE INFLUENCES THE MODULATORY EFFECT OF FISHOIL LIPID EMULSION ON HLA-DR EXPRESSIONR. M. Torrinhas, H. Goto, M. Gidlund, M. M. Sales, P. A. Oliveira, T. J. Manzoni, J. G. Rodrigues, D. L. Waitzberg, Brazil
159-P EFFECTS OF IMMUNE-ENHANCING ENTERAL FORMULA ON LPS-INDUCED ELEVATION OF PLASMA IL-6 AND TNF-ALPHA IN MALNOURISHED MICEK. Ono, S. Okada, H. Ohashi, K. Yokotani, S. Ogoshi, Japan
160-P CALORIC RESTRICTION INCREASES MUSCLE AND LIVER MITOCHONDRIAL OXIDATIVE CAPACITY IN YOUNG BUT NOT IN OLD RATSR. Barazzoni, M. Zanetti, L. Visintin, G. Biolo, M. Stebel, L. Cattin, G. Guarnieri, Italy
33
161-P ENDOTOXIN-INDUCED PROTEIN CATABOLISM IN MAN IS CLOSELY RELATED TO THE PROINFLAMMATORYCYTOKINE RESPONSEA. S. A. .. Khan, M. Soop, O. Rooyackers, K. Kaushal, E. A. Gardener, K. L. Tieszen, O. Ljungqvist, J. P. New, J. M. Gibson, G. L. Carlson, United Kingdom & Sweden
162-P PREVENTIVE EFFECT OF N-ACETYL-GLUTAMINE (NAQ) VS GLUTAMINE (Q) ON INTESTINAL DYSFUNCTIONINDUCED BY PROTEIN-ENERGY MALNUTRITION (PEM) IN PIGSM. Manzano, R. Rueda, J. H. Baxter, J. M. Lopez-Pedrosa, Spain & USA
163-P IS HEALTHY AGEING ASSOCIATED WITH AN OXIDANT-ANTIOXIDANT IMBALANCE ?B. M. Winklhofer-Roob, A. Meinitzer, G. Khoschsorur, M. Maritschnegg, W. Wonisch, J. Roob, P. Grolier, N. Cardinault, B. Tiran, I. Sundl, G. Halwachs, J. Ribalta, E. Rock, Austria & France & Spain
164-P CYTOKINE GENOTYPE AND GENDER INFLUENCE THE INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE TO SURGERYR. F. Grimble, . A. Thorell, J. Nygren, O. Ljungqvist, N. Barber, S. Grant, J. Madden, United Kingdom & Sweden
165-P GLUTATHIONE METABOLISM IN HUMAN LIVER AFTER ISCHEMIA AND REPERFUSIONB. Westman, A. Thörne, O. Rooyackers, F. Hammarqvist, J. Wernerman, Sweden
166-P ALLICIN INHIBITS SPONTANEOUS AND TNF-Ą INDUCED SECRETION OF PROINFLAMMATORY CYTOKINESAND CHEMOKINES FROM INTESTINAL EPITHELIAL CELLSA. Lang, M. Lahav, S. Bar-Meir, Y. Chowers, Israel
167-P EFFECTS OF ENDOTOXEMIA ON DIAPHRAGM MITOCHONDRIA IN 5 DAY VENTILATED PIGLETSK. S. Fredriksson, K. Ahlberg, P. Radell, L. I. Eriksson, J. Wernerman, O. Rooyackers, Sweden
168-P MYOSTATIN MRNA EXPRESSION IS NOT ALTERED BY STREPTOZOTOCIN-INDUCED DIABETES AND INSULINTREATMENT IN RAT SKELETAL MUSCLESR. Barazzoni, A. Bosutti, M. Zanetti, G. Biolo, M. Stebel, L. Cattin, G. Guarnieri, Italy
169-P SKELETAL MUSCLE APOPTOSIS IN GASTRIC CANCERM. Bossola, G. Doglietto, F. Pacelli, A. Broccolini, M. Muscaritoli, D. Facchini, A. Fava, F. Rossi Fanelli, Italy
170-P INCREASED SOLUBLE INTERLEUKIN-2 RECEPTOR CONCENTRATIONS IN PATIENTS RECEIVING EARLYPOSTOPERATIVE ENTERAL NUTRITIONM. E. P. Wirén, J. Ernerudh, J. Permert, J. Larsson, Sweden
THE CRITICALLY ILL
171-P HIGH PLASMA LEVELS OF ASYMMETRICAL DIMETHYLARGININE (ADMA) ARE LINKED TO MULTIPLE ORGAN DYSFUNCTIOND. Van Hoorn, Netherlands
172-P ELEVATION OF ASYMMETRIC DIMETHYLARGININE (ADMA) IN PATIENTS DEVELOPING HEPATIC FAILURE AFTER MAJOR HEPATECTOMYR. J. Nijveldt, T. Teerlink, M. P. Siroen, B. Van Der Hoven, H. A. Prins, J. R. Van Der Sijp, M. A. Cuesta, S. Meijer, P. A. Van Leeuwen, Netherlands
173-P ROLE AND PREDICTIVE VALUE OF LEPTIN IN VENTILATED PATIENTSB. Rabinovitch, J. Cohen, M. Shapiro, J. Attal-Singer, P. Singer, Israel
174-P THERMOGENIC AND METABOLIC RESPONSE TO AMINO ACID SOLUTION IN BRAIN DEAD PATIENTSI. Cankayali, K. Demirag, S. Kocabas, A. R. Moral, Turkey
175-P THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE SYSTEMIC INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE, INTRA-CELLULAR ANDCIRCULATING B-VITAMIN CONCENTRATIONS IN CRITICALLY-ILL PATIENTST. Quasim, D. C. Mcmillan, D. Talwar, D. S. T. J. O’Reilly, J. Kinsella, United Kingdom
176-P NEGATIVE ENERGY BALANCE IS HIGHLY CORRELATED TO COMPLICATIONS IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTSD. Dvir, L. Gibstein, E. Grozovski, D. Gordgi, M. Shapiro, J. Cohen, P. Singer, Israel
177-P METABOLIC RESPONSE DURING EXERCISE WITH A CARDIAC ASSIST DEVICEU. Jantsch, C. Zelenka, M. Quittan, W. Röthy, G. Wieselthaler, H. Schima, M. Hiesmayr, Austria
178-P LONGITUDINAL CHANGES IN WHOLE BLOOD GLUTATHIONE IN ICU PATIENTSU. B. Fläring, O. E. Rooyackers, F. Hammarqvist, J. Wernerman, Sweden
179-P EFFECT OF STANDARD AMINO ACID SOLUTION ON THERMOGENESIS AND ENERGY EXPENDITURE IN CONSCIOUS AND UNCONSCIOUS INTENSIVE CARE PATIENTSI. Cankayali, K. Demirag, S. Kocabas, A. R. Moral, Turkey
180-P THE EFFECTS OF SOYBEAN OIL EMULSION ON SERUM MONOCYTE CHEMOATTRACTANT PROTEIN-1 (MCP-1)LEVEL AND CELL-MEDIATED IMMUNITY IN MODERATELY OR SEVERELY STRESSED PATIENTSH. Shibasaki, H. Yamamori, K. Furukawa, N. Hayashi, M. Miyazaki, Japan
181-P A CLOSER LOOK AT DELIVERED NUTRITION IN THE ICU; WHAT YOU SEE IS NOT WHAT THEY GETR. J. M. Strack Van Schijndel, C. Koster, A. Bissumbhar, G. C. Melis, Netherlands
34
POSTERS
POSTERS
182-P AN AUDIT OF ENTERAL FEEDING ON ADULT INTENSIVE CARE UNIT (AICU)S. Illingworth, United Kingdom
183-P HIGH ARGININE PLASMA CONCENTRATIONS IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS SUFFERING FROM HEPATIC FAILURER. J. Nijveldt, M. P. Siroen, B. Van Der Hoven, T. Teerlink, H. A. Prins, P. A. Van Leeuwen, Netherlands
184-P SPLANCHNIC METABOLISM OF ENTERALLY INFUSED SODIUM 13C ACETATEL. Tappy, M. M. Berger, C. Cayeux, J. Revelly, M. Bollman, P. Schneiter, V. Rey, R. Chioléro, Switzerland
185-P TRENDS IN MARKERS OF INFLAMMATION AND OXIDATIVE DAMAGE IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTSV. Mishra, M. Baines, R. Wenstone, A. Shenkin, United Kingdom
186-P METABOLIC EFFECTS OF PARENTERAL NUTRITION WITH OR WITHOUT N-3 FATTY ACIDSL. Tappy, M. M. Berger, J. M. Schwarz, J. P. Revelly, M. C. Cayeux, M. Bollmann, R. Chiolero, Switzerland & USA
187-P EFFECT OF PARENTERAL GLUTAMINE SUPPLEMENTATION ON LYMPHOCYTE SUBPOPULATIONS IN CRITICALLYILL PATIENTS RECEIVING GLUTAMINE ENRICHED ENTERAL NUTRITIONK. Demirag, M. Uyar, O. Gulbahar, S. Kocabas, Y. Delen Akcay, A. R. Moral, Turkey
LIVER AND GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT
201-P THE SYSTEMIC INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE AND LIVER BLOOD FLOW IN CRITICALLY-ILL PATIENTSP. Glen, D. C. Mcmillan, E. Leen, W. J. Angerson, J. Kinsella, United Kingdom
202-P KUPFFER CELL DEPLETED RATS HAVE AN DIMINISHED ACUTE PHASE RESPONSE FOLLOWING MAJOR LIVERRESECTIONH. A. Prins, J. Diks, C. Meijer, R. Holtz, P. G. Boelens, S. Masson, M. Daveau, M. Scotté, P. A. M. Van Leeuwen,Netherlands & France
203-P INFLUANCE OF ENTERAL FEEDING ON SERUM FREE FATTY ACIDS IN LIVER CIRRHOSIS PATIENTSD. M. Mankowska-Wierzbicka, K. Derc, M. Grzymiaslawski, J. Przyslawski, Poland
204-P THE EFFECTS OF FATTY LIVER ON HEPATOCYTE APOPTOSIS AND LIVER REGENERATION AFTER PARTIALHEPATECTOMYH. Lai, P. Chen, W. Chen, Taiwan Province of China
205-P METABOLIC AND NUTRITIONAL ASSESMENT OF CANDIDATES FOR ORTHOTOPIC LIVERP. Wohl, P. Wohl, P. Truneèka, J. _pièák, T. Pelikánová, Czech Republic
206-P LIVER INVOLVEMENT IN ANOREXIA NERVOSAD. Milazzo, L. Di Pascoli, E. Zola, A. Lion, M. Nardi, G. Boffo, R. Zago, F. Francini, L. Caregaro, Italy
207-P FATTY INFILTRATION OF THE LIVER IN MORBIDLY OBESE PATIENTSJ. Faintuch, C. Oliveira, A. Raskovski, C. Furuya Jr, M. Bastos, M. Matsuda, A. Halpern, J. Gama Rodrigues, Brazil
208-P MANAGEMENT OF ENTEROCUTANEOUS FISTULAS: A NUTRITION SUPPORT TEAM’S EXPERIENCEM. L. Baker, J. M. D. Nightingale, J. F. Kennedy, United Kingdom
209-P EGF STIMULATED THE GRAFT FUNCTION AFTER SMALL BOWEL TRANSPLANTATION ON RATSK. Nakai, K. Kitagawa, Y. Hamada, K. Habara, M. Yamada, T. Okumura, Y. Nakane, Japan
210-P SUBTOTAL SMALL BOWEL RESECTION (SBR) IN CHRONIC INTESTINAL PSEUDO-OBSTRUCTION (CIPO)REFRACTORY TO TREATMENTF. Joly, J. Zeballos, S. Benoist, A. Lavergne, Y. Panis, J. Mikol, P. Valleur, B. Messing, France
211-P IN SITU COLONISATION AND IMMUNOMODULATION BY THE PROBIOTIC LACTOBACILLUS REUTERI (ATCC 55730) IN THE HUMAN GASTROINTESTINAL TRACTE. Connolly, N. Valeur, P. Engel, N. Carbajal, K. Ladefoged, Sweden & Denmark
212-P EFFECT OF CYCLOOXYGENASE (COX) AND LIPOXYGENASE (LOX) INHIBITORS ON SHORT-CHAIN FATTY ACIDSINDUCED TIGHT JUNCTION PERMEABILITY CHANGES IN INTESTINAL MONOLAYER CELLSM. Usami, A. Ohata, K. Kishimoto, M. Aoyama, M. Miyoshi, A. Tashiro, Japan
213-P ADMINISTRATION OF L-VALINE LOWERED PLASMA CHOLESTEROL BY ACCELERATING THE CONVERSION OFCHOLESTEROL INTO BILE ACIDM. Ohara, H. Doi, M. Hayasi, S. Satomi, Japan
214-P NUTRITIONAL STATUS AND BLEEDING FROM NSAID-INDUCED GASTRO-DUODENAL ULCERSS. K. K. Tsao, J. M. D. Nightingale, United Kingdom
215-P POSTOPERATIVE ADHESIONS IN COLONIC SURGERY. CAN PROBIOTIC ADMINISTRATION BE A PREVENTION?G. L. Mangiante, G. Colucci, Italy
216-P INHIBITION OF PATHOGEN ADHESION IN THE GUTJ. R. Rhoades, R. A. Rastall, United Kingdom
217-P ALTERED TASTE IN PATIENTS WITH JAUNDICET. Bley, Germany
35
218-P MORE SALT PLEASE! MANAGEMENT OF A HIGH OUTPUT STOMAM. L. Baker, J. M. D. Nightingale, J. F. Kennedy, United Kingdom
219-P A RESEARCH CONCERNING THE IMPORTANCE OF BCAA’S IN PATIENTS WITH LIVER CIRRHOSISB. Demirel, S. Mercanligil, S. Disibeyaz, F. Nisanci, F. Celik, Turkey
220-P NUTRITIONAL SUPPORT [NS]AND SURGICAL TREATMENT [ST] OF POSTOPERATORY GASTROINTESTINALFISTULAE [POGF]M. E. Ferreyra, M. C. Ocaña, R. Cervantes, Peru
221-P MEASUREMENT OF GASTRIC EMPTYING DURING CONTINUOUS NASOGASTRIC INFUSION OF ENTERAL FEEDC. T. Soulsby, M. K. Khela, E. Yazaki, D. F. Evans, J. Powell-Tuck, United Kingdom
222-P PREBIOTIC APPLICATIONS IN HUMAN VOLUNTEER TRIALSS. Kolida, K. M. Tuohy, G. R. Gibson, United Kingdom
223-P STABLE REVERSAL OF PRIMITIVE INTESTINAL LYMPHANGIECTASIAL. Santarpia, L. Santarpia, L. Alfonsi, M. Genua, F. D’Armiento, F. Contaldo, F. Pasanisi, Italy
224-P DIFFERENCES IN THE FAECAL FLORA OF HEALTHY INDIVIDUALS AND PATIENTS WITH IRRITABLE BOWELSYNDROME, AND IN VITRO EFFECTS OF A SYNBIOTIC UPON GUT FLORA COMPOSITIONS. Pistoli, C. Smejkal, A. Mccartney, G. R. Gibson, United Kingdom
225-P CHARACTERISATION OF THE GUT MICROFLORA IN PATIENTS WITH IRRITABLE BOWEL SYNDROME AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF A DIETARY SYNBIOTIC TREATMENT STRATEGYC. W. Smejkal, S. Pistoli, G. R. Gibson, United Kingdom
MALIGNANCIES
227-P GLUTAMINE ENHANCED NUTRITION IN GASTRIC CANCER PATIENTSZ. Csapo, G. Vesztergombi, L. Harsanyi, Hungary
228-P QUALITY OF LIFE UNDER HOME PARENTERAL NUTRITION WITH SPECIAL EMPHASIS ON CANCER PATIENTSP. Thul, K. Bauer, Germany & Switzerland
229-P THE AGREEMENT BETWEEN MEASURED AND PREDICTED RESTING ENERGY EXPENDITURE IN PATIENTS WITH PANCREATIC CANCER - A PILOT STUDYJ. D. Bauer, M. M. Reeves, S. Capra, Australia
230-P INTESTAMIN(r) INHIBITS PROLIFERATION AND INDUCES DIFFERENTIATION IN COLORECTAL CARCINOMAAND ADENOMA CELL LINEST. Kudlich, T. Steinbrunn, J. Schauber, R. Melcher, H. Luehrs, F. Weber, A. Gostner, W. Scheppach, T. Menzel,Germany
231-P CYTOKINE SERUM CONCENTRATION FOLLOWING SURGERY FOR ESOPHAGEAL CARCINOMA IN PATIENSWITH PERIOPERATIVE NUTRITIONAL SUPPORTR. Slotwinski, B. Szczygie3, A. Szaw_Owski, M. Talarek, W. L. Olszewski, Poland
232-P NUTRITION INTERVENTION: A PROSPECTIVE RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIAL IN COLORECTAL CANCERPATIENTS UNDERGOING RADIOTHERAPYP. Ravasco, I. Monteiro Grillo, P. Marques Vidal, M. Camilo, Portugal
233-P NUTRITION & PATIENT OUTCOMES: PROSPECTIVE RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIAL IN HEAD-NECKCANCER PATIENTS UNDERGOING RADIOTHERAPYP. Ravasco, I. Monteiro Grillo, P. Marques Vidal, M. Camilo, Portugal
234-P NUTRITION & PATIENT OUTCOMES: A PROSPECTIVE RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIAL IN COLORECTALCANCER PATIENTS UNDERGOING RADIOTHERAPYP. Ravasco, I. Monteiro Grillo, P. Marques Vidal, M. Camilo, Portugal
235-P LEPTIN LEVELS AND ITS RELATION TO LUNG CANCER CACHEXIAT. O. S. R. Barros, L. Kent-Smith, L. L. Santos, J. D. Silva, Portugal
236-P NUTRITIONAL COUNSELLING VS SUPPLEMENTS: A PROSPECTIVE RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIAL INHEAD-NECK CANCER PATIENTS UNDERGOING RADIOTHERAPYP. Ravasco, I. Monteiro Grillo, P. Marques Vidal, M. Camilo, Portugal
237-P THE COMPARISON OF STANDARD ENTERAL AND IMMUNE-NUTRITION IN PATIENTS WITH LARYNX CANCER: A RANDOMIZED PROSPECTIVE STUDYS. Demirer, E. Gungor, A. Tuzuner, S. Aydintug, M. Demirkiran, V. Genc, D. Balcy‘, B. Erkek, P. Sonyurek, M. Akin,Turkey
238-P WEIGHT MAINTENANCE IN CANCER PATIENTS DURING CHEMO- OR RADIOTHERAPYB. Ipsen, J. Kondrup, Denmark
239-P EFFECT OF PREOPERATIVE ADMINISTRATION OF METHYLPREDNISONE ON BLOODSTREAM TUMOR CELLMETASTASIS AFTER SURGICAL STRESSN. Ishibashi, K. Momosaki, Y. Oka, N. Iwakuma, A. Kaibara, K. Shirouzu, Japan
36
POSTERS
POSTERS
240-P HOME PREOPERATIVE ENTERAL NUTRITION IN HEAD AND NECK CANCER SEVERELY MALNOURISHEDPATIENTSP. Coti Bertrand, I. Bordier, M. Roulet, Switzerland
241-P HOME PARENTERAL NUTRITION (HPN): SURVIVAL IN ADVANCED CANCER PATIENTSC. Finocchiaro, S. Gervasio, M. Fadda, M. L. Amerio, F. D’Andrea, D. Domeniconi, A. Pezzana, L. Rovera, A. Palmo, Italy
242-P NEOPTERIN IS DECREASED IN PATIENTS WITH CANCER CACHEXIA RECEIVING FISH OIL SUPPLEMENTATIONM. M. Keville, G. Grimble, R. Beaney, United Kingdom
243-P PROSPECTIVE EVALUATION OF OUTCOMES AND BODY MASS INDICES AFTER D2 GASTRECTOMY FORCARCINOMAP. M. Murphy, G. R. Blackshaw, W. G. Lewis, United Kingdom
244-P FISH OIL SUPPLEMENTATION IN PATIENTS WITH CANCER CACHEXIA UNDERGOING CHEMOTHERAPY ANDRADIOTHERAPY. WHAT IS THE EFFECT AND HOW WELL DO PATIENTS COMPLY ?M. M. Keville, G. Grimble, N. Howard, United Kingdom
245-P DIETARY GUIDANCE TO FAMILY MEMBERS OF CANCER PATIENTSG. Jøranli, A. Bye, Norway
246-P NUTRITIONAL SUPPORT IN CANCER PATIENTS: A MANAGEMENT ALGORITHMC. Gómez Candela, Spain
247-P RESULTS OF THE EPIDEMILOGYCAL STUDY “NUPAC” ON THE NUTRITION OF PATIENTS (P) WITH LOCALLY-ADVANCED OR METASTATIC CANCER (LAMC)C. Gomez-Candela, A. Segura, J. Pardo, C. Jara, L. Zugazabeitia, J. Carulla, Spain
248-P PLASMA ARGININE CONCENTRATIONS ARE DECREASED IN GASTROINTESTINAL CANCERY. L. J. Vissers, C. H. C. Dejong, R. R. W. J. Van Der Hulst, N. E. P. Deutz, Y. C. Luiking, K. C. H. Fearon, M. F. Von Meyenfeldt, Netherlands & United Kingdom
249-P ADEQUACY AND FAILURE OF NUTRITIONAL ASSESSMENT METHODS IN CANCERP. Ravasco, V. Proença, I. Monteiro Grillo, M. Camilo, Portugal
250-P EVALUATION OF ELDERLY PATIENT’S NUTRITIONAL STATUS IN ONCOLOGYD. Pérol, G. Albrand, C. Terret, C. Fingal, L. Gambotti, Y. Lallemand, P. Roux, P. Bachmann, J. P. Doroz, France
251-P PREOPERATIVE MALNUTRITION AND POSTOPERATIVE OUTCOMES IN TRANSFUSED CANCER PATIENTS: MORE FOOD FOR THOUGHTM. K. Mallath, M. Shirodkar, S. A. Mehta, India
252-P ARSENIC TRIOXIDE AND DOCOSAHEXAENOIC ACID: A NOVEL ANTICANCER THERAPY?M. Baumgartner, S. Sturlan, T. Bachleitner-Hofmann, E. Roth, Austria
253-P NUTRITIONAL INTERVENTION IN ELECTIVE SURGERY FOR COLORECTAL CANCERR. Burgos, A. Peñalva, M. Conde, E. Espin, M. Armengol, J. Roselló, M. Planas, Spain
254-P A PROSPECTIVE COHORT STUDY OF PROPHYLACTIC FEEDING JEJUNOSTOMYK. F. Chin, S. Townsend, W. Z. Wong, G. V. Miller, United Kingdom
255-P PERCUTANEOUS ENDOSCOPIC GASTROSTOMY IN HEAD AND NECK CANCER PATIENTSP. Vitek, O. Urban, P. Kominek, P. Vantuch, J. Chalupa, P. Reha, V. Mrozek, Czech Republic
393-P IMPLEMENTATION OF AN ENHANCED RECOVERY PROGRAM IN COLON SURGERY: PITFALLSJ. M. C. Maessen, M. G. H. Dautzenberg, E. C. A. Machiels, M. M. J. Rouflart, C. H. C. Dejong, M. F. Von Meyenfeldt, Netherlands
394-P LOW PLASMA ARGININE CONCENTRATION IN TUMOUR-BEARING MICE IS NOT RELATED TO INCREASED DE NOVO ARGININE PRODUCTION IN THE KIDNEYY. L. J. Vissers, M. F. Von Meyenfeldt, Y. C. Luiking, C. H. C. Dejong, N. E. P. Deutz, Netherlands
PEDIATRICS
258-P EVOLUTION OF HOME ENTERAL NUTRITION IN CHILDREN OVER A 11-YEAR PERIODF. Gottrand, D. Guimber, W. Daveluy, K. Mention, D. Lescut, L. Michaud, D. Turck, France
259-P SAFETY OF INFANT FORMULA SUPPLEMENTED WITH PROBIOTICS IN EARLY INFANCYZ. Weizman, A. Alsheikh, Israel
260-P A STANDARD AQUEOUS PARENTERAL NUTRITION FORMULATION FOR NEONATAL INTENSIVE CAREC. Morgan, S. Keady, A. Ozzard, B. Chauhan, United Kingdom
261-P EFFICACY AND SAFETY OF HOME PARENTERAL NUTRITION IN PEDIATRIC PATIENTSM. Gambarara, A. Diamanti, F. Ferretti, B. Papadatou, D. Knafelz, F. D’Orio, I. Tarissi, M. Castro, Italy 37
262-P HOME ARTIFICIAL NUTRITION IN CHILDREN - IN POLANDM. Lyszkowska, K. Popiñska, J. Kierkus, K. Bogucki, D. Celinska-Cedro, B. Polonska, M. Podemska, A. Olek, J. Ksiazyk, Poland
263-P THE EFFECT OF DOCOSAHEXAENOIC ACID SUPPLEMENTATION DURING PREGNANCY AND LACTATION ON OFFSPRING GROWTH AND NEURODEVELOPMENT IN A RAT MODEL FOR INTRAUTERINE GROWTH RETARDATIONY. Shiff13 M. Rotstein, H. Bassan, R. Reifen, S. Harel, Israel
264-P CARE OF INFANTS WITH INTESTINAL FILURE: HOME PARENTERAL NUTRITION OR INTESTINALTRANSPLANTATION. AN ETHICAL CHALLENGE?J. M. Moreno, M. J. Galiano, M. Leon-Sanz, Spain
265-P ENDOSCOPIC GASTRO-JEJUNOSTOMY: EXPERIENCE IN CHILDRENF. Gottrand, L. Michaud, Z. Naja, D. Guimber, N. Rifai, K. Mention, D. Turck, France
266-P LIVER DISEASE IN PEDIATRIC PATIENTS ON HOME PARENTERAL NUTRITIONA. Diamanti, M. Gambarara, R. Boldrini, M. Marcellini, F. Ferretti, B. Papadatou, D. Russo, M. Castro, Italy
267-P CHANGES IN THE PROFILE OF PARENTERAL NUTRITION IN PAEDIATRIC PATIENTS ALONG A DECADEJ. M. Moreno, F. Fernandez-Carrion, J. I. Sanchez Diaz, P. Gomis, M. Leon-Sanz, Spain
268-P ENERGY EXPENDITURE IN HUMAN MILK VERSUS FORMULA FED PRETERM INFANTSN. Vaisman, R. Lubetzky, F. Mimouni, S. Dollberg, Israel
269-P RESTING ENERGY EXPENDITURE IN CHILDREN WITH CYSTIC FIBROSIS: MEASUREMENT WITH A NEWHANDHELD CALORIMETERD. Fuentes, L. Suarez, T. Soto, H. Escobar, Spain
270-P MONITORING CLINICAL AND ECONOMIC OUTCOMES IN PEDIATRIC NUTRITION SUPPORT: AN 8 YEAR PROSPECTIVE STUDYJ. E. Bines, M. Peterkin, H. Shalley, L. Rogers, P. Parkin, R. Heine, Australia
271-P PLASMA AMINO ACID LEVELS IN CHILDREN WITH SICKLE CELL DISEASE RECEIVING AN ORAL GLUTAMINESUPPLEMENTM. C. Storm, R. A. Helms, R. Williams, S. Olivi, C. Li, W. C. Wang, USA
272-P AEROBIC ENDURANCE AND SERUM LEPTIN RESPONSE IN OBESE PREPUBERTAL CHILDRENM. Souza, A. Cardoso, P. Yazbek Jr, Brazil
273-P OUTCOME IN CHILDREN ON LONG TERM-(HOME)-PARENTERAL NUTRITION: A 20 YEAR-EXPERIENCEV. Colomb, C. Talbotec, O. Goulet, O. Corriol, M. Lamor, France
274-P PLASMA HOMOCYSTEINE LEVELS OF PEDIATRIC DIABETIC PATIENTS IN RELATION TO FOOD INTAKEPARAMETERST. Lampoudi, M. Papadopoulou, A. Apostolou, A. Peletidou, A. Vreta, Greece
275-P CUTANEOUS MARKERS:PREDICTORS OF CARDIOVASCULAR RISK FACTORS AND GLUCOSE INTOLERANCE IN OBESE CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS?C. M. Rego, H. Alencastre, D. Silva, A. Aguiar, A. Guerra, Portugal
276-P INCIDENCE AND OUTCOME OF HOSPITAL ACQUIRED MALNUTRITION IN CHILDRENA. Campanozzi, A. Tummolo, I. Rutigliano, A. Nigro, V. Alberghini, D. D’Ademo, A. Romondia, A. Iolascon, Italy
277-P NUTRITIONAL EVALUATION OF A NEW SEMI-ELEMENTAL DIETY. Vandenplas, K. Plaskie, Belgium
278-P MALNUTRITION IN YOUNG CHILDREN WITH CONGENITAL HEART DISEASE: PREVALENCE AND RISK FACTORSV. Colomb, J. Rolon, M. Lorrain, C. Talbotec, France
279-P A MULTI-DISCIPLINARY THERAPY PROGRAMM FOR MORBIDLY OBESE CHILDREN AND TEENAGERS: RESULTS AFTER 7 MONTHSK. M. Widhalm, S. Dietrich, S. Daemon, Austria
280-P ADEQUATE NUTRITION OF PATIENTS WITH DIARRHOEA SYNDROMEE. Khoroshilov, Russian Federation
TREATMENT AND OUTCOME291-P EFFECTS OF LIPID BASED NUTRITION ON CLINICAL OUTCOME OF PATIENTS AFTER SEVERE TRAUMA
G. Huschak, K. Zur Nieden, R. Stuttmann, Germany292-P FISTULOCLYSIS CAN SUCCESSFULLY REPLACE PARENTERAL FEEDING IN ACUTE INTESTINAL FAILURE
A. Teubner, K. Farrer, H. R. Ravishankar, J. L. Shaffer, G. L. Carlson, United Kingdom293-P NUTRIENTS DO PLAY A ROLE IN THE QUALITY OF LIFE OF HAEMODIALYSIS PATIENTS
P. Ravasco, P. Raimundo, V. Proença, N. Ladeira, M. Camilo, Portugal294-P THE EFFECTS OF DIETARY DAILY INTAKE AND LIFE STYLE ON BONE DENSITY IN PATIENTS WITH DIABETES
MELLITUS TYPE 2D. De Luis, R. Aller, O. Izaola, C. Terroba, L. Cuellar, J. Perez Castrillon, Spain
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295-P ENTERAL NUTRIENT DELIVERY INCREASES WITH HIGHER CALORIE PRESCRIPTIONS DURING THE FIRST FIVE DAYS OF ENTERAL NUTRITIONL. Genton, K. A. Kudsk, Y. M. Dupertuis, J. Romand, P. Jolliet, C. Pichard, USA & Switzerland
296-P EARLY ENTERAL NUTRITION OF PARTURIENTS AFTER ABDOMINAL LABOURE. M. Shifman, Russian Federation
297-P AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE USE OF TOTAL PARENTERAL NUTRITION WITHIN A DISTRICT GENERALHOSPITAL OVER A TWO YEAR PERIOD (2000-2002)P. M. Murphy, United Kingdom
298-P NUTRITION MANAGEMENT OF INDUSTRIAL BURNSM. Sikroria, U. Kumar, N. Rajput, H. Kulkarni, India
299-P ORAL INTAKE OF A SAMPLE OF IRRITABLE BOWEL SYNDROME PATIENTSR. Aller, D. De Luis, T. Arranz, L. Del Olmo, L. Fernandez Salazar, O. Izaola, F. De La Calle, Spain
300-P IMMUNONUTRITION (IMN) FOR PROPHYLAXIS OF POSTOPERATIVE INFECTIONS IN MAJOR SURGERYD. L. Waitzberg, H. Saito, L. Planck, G. G. Jamieson, A. Schmid, D. Bihari, P. Jagannath, T. L. Hwang, Brazil & Japan & New Zealand & Australia & Switzerland & India & Taiwan Province of China
301-P THE EFFECT OF SUPPLEMENTAL PARENTERAL GLUTAMINE ON PLASMA LEVELS, GUT FUNCTION ANDOUTCOME AFTER MAJOR ESCHARECTOMY IN SEVERE BURNS: A RANDOMIZED, DOUBLE-BLIND,CONTROLLED CLINICAL TRIALY. Zhou, Z. Jiang, Y. Sun, China
302-P POSTOPERATIVE PHYSICAL TRAINING HAD NO EFFECT ON CHANGES IN BODY COMPOSITIONK. B. Houborg, M. B. Jensen, I. Hessov, S. Laurberg, Denmark
303-P RISK FACTORS FOR FAILURE AND IMMEDIATE COMPLICATIONS OF INTERNAL JUGULAR CENTRAL VENOUSACCESS (IJCVA) IN CANCER PATIENTSL. Gambotti, D. Pérol, B. Frering, B. Coronel, H. Sebban, R. Andréo, V. Bachelot, P. Bachmann, France
304-P ETHANOL LOCKS IN THE MANAGEMENT OF CENTRAL VENOUS CATHETER SEPSIS; REVIEW OF SEVEN CASESP. A. Ball, E. M. Brokenshire, L. Paul, B. Parry, A. Wesley, S. Chin, New Zealand
305-P RADIOLOGICALLY INSERTED GASTROSTOMY IS AS SAFE AS PERCUTANEOUS ENDOSCOPIC TECHNIQUE N AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS PATIENTSJ. C. Desport, B. Bouillet, P. M. Preux, K. Makabakayele, P. R. Couratier, France
306-P BEDSIDE MANUAL POSTPYLORIC FEEDING TUBE PLACEMENT: ANALYSIS OF 194 PATIENTSG. Avci, P. Eldeniz, A. Topeli Iskit, E. Koca, M. Dur, Z. Dundar, O. Abbasoglu, Turkey
307-P PERCUTANEOUS ENDOSCOPIC GASTROSTOMY (PEG) IN ELDERLY - INDICATIONS AND SURVIVALA. Malmgren, T. Cederholm, G. Faxén Irving, B. Karlström, P. Lundquist, M. Wirén, Sweden
308-P SIX-MONTH OUTCOME OF PATIENTS HAVING GASTROSTOMYV. A. Alivizatos, N. Makris, P. Athanasopoulos, K. Potsis, Greece
309-P THERAPEUTIC EFFECT OF INCREASING BOLUS VISCOSITY IN NEUROGENIC DYSPHAGIAP. Clave, R. Terré, M. De Kraaa, M. Girvent, R. Farré, J. Pradas, M. Martinell, M. Bernabeu, M. Serra, Spain
310-P FLUOROSCOPIC GUIDED INSERTION OF SILICON NASOJEJUNAL FEEDING TUBES AFTER FAILED ENDOSCOPICOR BEDSIDE INSERTIONA. I. Bloom, A. Verstandig, Israel
311-P OUR EXPERIENCE WITH SELF-PROPELLING BENGMARK’S TUBE ON SURGICAL NUTRITIONG. L. Mangiante, G. Colucci, M. Ciola, Italy
312-P BASILIC IS BEST- A PROSPECTIVE STUDY TO IDENTIFY THE FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH FAILURE OFPERIPHERAL MIDLINE INTRAVENOUS NUTRITION DUE TO THROMBOPHLEBITISJ. M. Wood, J. Davies, J. A. Catton, J. Eastwood, M. J. Mcmahon, United Kingdom
313-P ENDOSCOPIC PLACEMENT OF FEEDING TUBES: IF THE GUT WORKS, IT CAN BE REACHED AND USEDM. K. Mallath, Y. M. Shastri, M. Shirodkar, S. A. Mehta, India
314-P ACUTE PANCREATITIS AND NUTRITIONAL ROUTINES;B. Westman, L. Larsson, J. Nordanstig, F. Hammarqvist, Sweden
315-P INFLUENCE OF ORAL SIP FEEDING ON COURSE, TREATMENT AND OUTCOME OF CHRONIC PANCREATITISE. Khoroshilov, Russian Federation
316-P LONG TERM ENTERAL NUTRITION ACCELERATES RESOLUTION OF PSEUDOCYSTS AFTER SEVERE ACUTE PANCREATITISP. Tesinsky, J. Svanda, Z. Rusavy, Czech Republic
317-P COST-EFFECTIVENESS OF PREOPERATIVE SUPPLEMENTATION WITH IMMUNONUTRITION IN TREATING POSTOPERATIVE MORBIDITYL. Gianotti, M. Braga, A. Schmid, A. Vignali, V. Di Carlo, Italy & Switzerland
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318-P FRUCTOOLIGOSACCARIDES (FOS) MODIFY INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE AFTER CARDIAC SURGERYA. Liedler, M. Skolka, M. Hiesmayr, Austria
319-P EFFECT OF NUTRITIONAL SUPPORT ON CLINICAL OUTCOME IN PATIENTS AT NUTRITIONAL RISKN. Johansen, J. Kondrup, L. M. Plum, L. Bak, P. Nørregaard, N. Lauesen, E. Bunch, H. Bærnthsen, J. R. Andersen,I. H. Larsen, A. Martinsen, Denmark
320-P WEIGHT LOSS POST LOWER LIMB FRACTURE DESPITE AN INTENSIVE ORAL NUTRITION AND EXERCISEINTERVENTIONL. A. Daniels, M. Miller, E. Bannerman, C. Whitehead, M. Crotty, Australia
321-P ACUTE PANCREATITIS: COMPARISON BETWEEN POLYMERIC NUTRITION AND SEMI-ELEMENTAL NUTRITIONM. A. Piquet, L. E. Tiengou, I. Ollivier, R. Gloro, K. Bouhier, F. Arnaud-Battandier, J. Plaze, T. Dao, France
322-P UTILITY AND IMPORTANCE OF CALORIC SUPPLEMENTATION WITH AN IMMUNE-ENHANCING DIET INGASTRECTOMIZED PATIENTSU. Bolder, A. Herrmann, A. Niebauer, M. Wintersberger, K. Jauch, H. Schlitt, Germany
323-P CYTOKINE PROFILE IN SURGICAL PATIENTS AFTER TOTAL PARENTERAL NUTRITIONG. Lech, R. S_Otwiñski, M. Zaleska, M. S_Odkowski, W. Cebulski, B. Szczygie_, I. W. Krasnodêbski, Poland
324-P THE REFEEDING SYNDROME- HOW GOOD ARE WE AT PREDICTING IT?J. Davies, J. M. Wood, J. A. Catton, J. E. Scantlebury, M. J. Mcmahon, United Kingdom
325-P MALNOURISHED ADULT PATIENTS WITH SEVERE LIVER DISEASE AND NUTRITIONAL MANAGEMENTG. M. Rovera, B. Saber, P. Maffeis, D. Ferrari, M. Labate, M. Spanu, L. Manghisi, S. Spagna, I. Forestiero, S. Zago, Italy
326-P THE SF 36 INSTRUMENT FOR THE FOLLOW UP OF QUALITY OF LIFE (QOL) ASSESSMENT IN HOMEPARENTERAL NUTRITION (HPN) FOR BENIGN DISEASEL. Pironi, F. Paganelli, G. Spinucci, C. Merli, C. Guidetti, M. Miglioli, Italy
327-P MONITORING PATIENTS ON HOME PARENTERAL NUTRITION (HPN) IN EUROPEA. Wengler, A. Micklewright, X. Hébuterne, F. Bozzetti, J. Moreno, M. Pertkiewicz, A. Van Gossum, P. Thul, M. Staun, Denmark
328-P HOME PARENTERAL NUTRITION: NEW PATIENTS FROM 2000 TO 2002 IN AN OUTPATIENT CLINICALNUTRITION UNIT IN SOUTHERN ITALYG. Violante, L. Alfonsi, L. Santarpia, C. Cillis, N. Russo, G. Negro, F. Contaldo, F. Pasanisi, Italy
329-P INDICATIONS TO HOME PARENTERAL NUTRITION IN AN OUTPATIENT CLINICAL NUTRITION UNITG. Violante, L. Alfonsi, L. Santarpia, C. Cillis, N. Russo, G. Negro, F. Contaldo, F. Pasanisi, Italy
330-P INTRAVENOUS PAMIDRONATE IMPROVES BONE MINERAL DENSITY IN HOME PARENTERAL NUTRITIONPATIENTSR. A. Nishikawa, S. E. Siepler, J. K. Siepler, T. Diamantidis, R. Okamoto, USA
331-P SUVIVAL ANALYSIS IN A COHORT OF ADULT PATIENTS ON HOME PARENTERAL NUTRITION. PROGNOSTICFACTORS RETALED TO EARLY AND OVERALL MORTALITYR. Vega, D. Polymeros, C. Papadia, R. Hodgson, A. Forbes, S. Gabe, United Kingdom
332-P PRESERVING ACCESS IN HOME INTRAVENOUS NUTRITION (HIVN) PATIENTS- THE ROLE OF IN-SITUDIAGNOSTIC TESTING AND AGGRESSIVE ANTIBIOTIC THERAPYJ. A. Catton, J. Davies, J. M. Wood, K. Eastwood, M. J. Mcmahon, United Kingdom
333-P THE FRENCH HPN PROSPECTIVE REGISTER FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN: RESULTS AFTER 2 YEARSP. Crenn, France
334-P GLUTAMINE SUPPLEMENTATION IS SAFE IN HOME PARENTERAL NUTRITION (HPN)A. Culkin, S. M. Gabe, A. Forbes, C. Chadwick, United Kingdom
335-P HOME PARENTERAL NUTRITION IN PATIENTS USING SPECIALIZED HOME CARE PROVIDERS WITHOUTCOMPLICATIONS HAS A HIGHER QUALITY OF LIFE THAN THOSE USING A GENERAL HOME CARE PROVIDERJ. K. Siepler, T. Diamantidis, R. Okamoto, USA
336-P HOME ENTERAL NUTRITION: ORAL VERSUS TUBE FEEDINGM. Planas, P. García Luna, E. Camarero, J. Chamorro, J. Irles, A. Calañas, M. Gimenez, G. Adrio, A. Pérez De La Cruz, A. Rodríguez, P. Gómez-Enterría, A. Mancha, M. Bobis, A. Bonada, I. Zamarrón, E. Martí, A. Cos, R. Pares, D. De Luís, L. Luengo, M. Goena, Spain
337-P ADMISSINO RATE IN PATIENTS WITH NON NEOPLASTIC DISEASES ON LONG TERM HOME ARTIFICIALNUTRITIONR. Bonifacio, L. Alfonsi, L. Santarpia, M. Genua, F. Contaldo, F. Pasanisi, Italy
338-P TOWARD ACHIEVING BEST PRACTICE IN TOTAL PARENTERAL NUTRITIONN. Simmance, F. Tanner, R. Sewell, Australia
339-P NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS AND QUALITY OF LIFE IN STABLE COPD PATIENTSM. Planas, J. Alvarez, P. García-Peris, C. De La Cuerda, P. De Lucas, M. Castellà, F. Canseco, L. Reyes, Spain
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340-P ENDOLUMINAL BRUSHING AUDIT: A NUTRITION TEAM’S EXPERIENCEP. Deel-Smith, T. Digger, B. J. M. Jones, United Kingdom
341-P THE DIFFERENCES OF CRP AND PREALBUMIN LEVELS BEFORE AND AFTER MAJOR ABDOMINAL SURGERYACCORDING TO NUTRITIONAL ROUTESB. Erkek, A. Tuzuner, V. Genc, M. Demirkiran, D. Balcy‘, S. Demirer, S. Aydintug, M. Akin, Ö. Ciftci, P. Sonyurek, E. Gungor, Turkey
342-P POSTPYLORIC INSERTION OF FEEDING TUBE IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS - IT IS SIMPLEK. A. Karwowska, P. Samolewski, R. Lecybyl, A. Nowakowska, R. Szulc, Poland
343-P A QUESTION OF ACCESS- A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF CATHETER RELATED COMPLICATIONS OCCURRINGDURING CENTRAL AND PERIPHERAL INTRAVENOUS NUTRITIONJ. Davies, J. A. Catton, J. M. Wood, M. J. Mcmahon, United Kingdom
344-P INSERTION OF A NASOJEJUNAL FEEDING TUBE AND RETROSEPTAL NASAL BRIDLE IN ELDERLY DEMENTED PATIENTSA. I. Bloom, Israel
345-P TPN ADMINISTRATION IS REDUCED BY DUODENAL FEEDING PRESCRIPTIONH. Fisher, R. Attia, R. Inbar, M. Tehila, M. Fishman, N. Barak, P. Singer, Israel
NUTRITIONAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, COMMUNICATION
350-P EVALUATION OF HOSPITAL/HOME NUTRITIONAL SERVICER. Burgos, C. Puiggrós, C. Pérez-Portabella, T. Rodríguez, C. Neira, E. Dalmau, D. Elvira, P. Sabin, M. Planas, Spain
351-P NUTRITIONAL RISK SCREENING NRS 2001 IN UNDERNUTRITION RISK SCREENING OF HOSPITALISEDELDERLYC. A. Martins, J. R. Correia, T. F. Amaral, Portugal
352-P MODELLING THE COST-EFFECTIVENESS OF NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS IN THE UK IN PRE-OPERATIVEPATIENTSF. Pang, D. Ossa, J. Hutton, J. Edington, United Kingdom
353-P MALNUTRITION AND OBESITY IN BRAZILIAN SCHOOL CHILDRENA. Toso, C. Ribeiro, L. Grillo, G. Arruda, J. Faintuch, Brazil
354-P NURSING STUDENTS AND THEIR ATTITUDES TOWARDS THE USE OF ALTERNATIVE MEDICINES. Pettersen, A. Bye, Norway
355-P MANAGEMENT OF TPN, DOES IT REQUIRE A MEDICAL PRACTITIONER?K. M. Farrer, L. J. Harper, J. L. Shaffer, I. D. Anderson, N. A. Scott, G. L. Carlson, United Kingdom
356-P A NEW METHOD FOR IMPLEMENTATION OF NUTRITIONAL THERAPY IN HOSPITALSH. H. Rasmussen, J. Kondrup, M. Staun, K. Ladefoged, H. Kristensen, A. Wengler, Denmark
357-P HOW TO INITIATE A MULTIDISCIPLINARY NUTRITION PROJECT IN A HOSPITAL WARD ?M. Holst, H. Kristensen, A. Wengler, Denmark
358-P IN HOSPITAL MALNUTRITION RECOGNISED EARLIER AND TREATED MORE EFFICIENTLY AFTERIMPLEMENTATION OF A NUTRITIONAL SUPPORT TEAMC. W. L. .. Bruijnen, Houben, L. Jeuken, C. L. H. Van Berlo, Netherlands
359-P DEVELOPMENT OF A SHORT NUTRITIONAL ASSESSMENT QUESTIONNAIRE (SNAQ)H. M. Kruizenga, J. A. Seidell, H. C. W. De Vet, M. A. E. Van Bokhorst, Netherlands
360-P EVENING MEALS FOR FRAIL SERVICE FLAT RESIDENTS - A PILOT STUDYA. Ödlund Olin, A. Koochek, T. Cederholm, O. Ljungqvist, Sweden
361-P PREVALENCE OF MALNUTRITION IN HOSPITALIZED PATIENTS WITH DIGESTIVE DISORDERS IN A BELGIANACADEMIC CENTERA. Van Gossum, C. Montoisy, L. Drumel, M. Arvanitaki, S. Vereecken, K. Buedts, Belgium
362-P INCIDENCE OF NUTRITIONAL RISK IN A UNIVERSITY HOSPITALA. Demagistris, B. Bianco, L. Cardinali, V. Caudera, S. Giorgini, A. Mollo, R. Morelli, G. Onorati, P. Pradella, M. Turchetto, G. Xompero, A. Palmo, Italy
363-P DOES TUBE FEEDING AFFECT HOSPITAL MORTALITYE. R. Stoppard, S. T. Burden, J. L. Shaffer, K. Ward, M. J. Connolly, A. J. Makin, United Kingdom
364-P STUDY OF THE DIRECT COSTS OF HOSPITALIZATION IN A PARENTERAL NUTRITION WARD: IS THE FINANCING FAIR ?R. E. Rusch, J. F. Joly, D. Chevalier, K. Vahedi, B. Messing, France
365-P ATTITUDES OF NUTRITION NURSE SPECIALISTS (NNS) TOWARDS TELEMEDICINE (TM) IN HOMEPARENTERAL NUTRITION (HPN) IN THE UKA. Chambers, J. Powell-Tuck, United Kingdom
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366-P THE NUTRITIONAL GAP BETWEEN ICU AND GENERAL HOSPITAL WARDG. C. Melis, K. A. C. Berk, J. C. M. Van Der Steen, R. J. M. Strack Van Schijndel, Netherlands
367-P MANAGEMENT OF HYPOALBUMINEMIA IN HOSPITALIZED PATIENTSA. A. Zanini, A. Oller, L. Henrique, T. S. Oliveira, A. Souza, J. Faintuch, Brazil
368-P ORAL NUTRITION SUPPLEMENTS - PRESCRIBING AND MONITORING IN THE COMMUNITYG. Flanagan, Ireland
369-P A SURVEY OF SCREENING AND NUTRITIONAL MANAGEMENT IN HOSPITALS AND THE COMMUNITYJ. Edington, A. Saleh, I. Girod, F. Pang, United Kingdom
370-P MINI NUTRITIONAL ASSESSMENT AND A THREE YEAR FOLLOW-UP IN ELDERLY SUBJECTS RECEIVINGMUNICIPAL SUPPORTA. Saletti, L. Johansson, E. Yifter-Lindgren, K. Österberg, U. Wissing, T. Cederholm, Sweden
371-P PREVALENCE OF PATIENTS AT NUTRITIONAL RISK IN DANISH HOSPITALSH. H. Rasmussen, J. Kondrup, M. Staun, K. Ladefoged, H. Kristensen, A. Wengler, Denmark
372-P NUTRITIONAL STATUS AND TREATMENT 10 YEARS ON FROM THE KING’S FUND REPORTE. R. Stoppard, S. T. Burden, J. L. Shaffer, K. Ward, M. J. Connolly, A. J. Makin, United Kingdom
373-P LEVELS OF PLASMA MALONDIALDEHYDE IN LOW SOCIOECONOMIC LEVEL SCHOOLCHILDRENR. S. Sarni, S. Hix, T. S. Pitta, A. Fernandes, F. I. Souza, D. O. Schoeps, Brazil
374-P NUTRITIONAL RISK SCREENING IN HOSPITALIZED PATIENTS IN GALICIA (SPAIN)M. A. Martinez, M. J. Martinez, E. Martinez, V. Del Campo, Collaborative Group For Thr Study Of HospitalMalnutrition, Spain
375-P DIETARY RECOMMENDATIONS IN GERIATRIC PEOPLEH. Segurola, C. Pérez-Portbella, A. Llatas, T. Hidalgo, N. Moreno, R. Burgos, C. Puiggrós, M. Planas, Spain
376-P CURRENT TRENDS IN NUTRITIONAL SUPPORT DURING HOSPITALIZATION IN POLANDM. Pertkiewicz, M. Dymkowska, Poland
377-P PREVALENCE OF MALNUTRITION IN GASTROENTEROLOGY INPATIENTS IN CROATIAZ. Krznaric, D. Vranesic, B. Vucelic, Croatia
NUTRITIONAL PHARMACOLOGY
381-P GLUTAMINE: ALL-IN-ONE AND ONE-FOR-ALL?P. A. Ball, V. Ilic, G. Hardy, New Zealand & United Kingdom
382-P COMPATIBILITY OF DRUGS WITH TOTAL NUTRIENT ADMIXTURES (TNA) CONTAINING DIFFERENT LIPIDEMULSIONSE. Muntada, J. Massó, A. Del Pozo, N. Creus, M. Pérez-Cebrián, M. Miana, E. López, J. Ribas, Spain
383-P VARYING MACRONUTRIENT AND ELECTROLYTE RATIOS ON ALL-IN-ONE (AIO) STABILITYD. F. Driscoll, A. Silvestri, K. Klutsch, B. R. Bistrian, J. Nehne, USA & Germany
384-P IMPACT OF SULFITE ANTIOXIDANT ON TOTAL NUTRIENT ADMIXTURE (TNA) STABILITYM. B. Baker, B. Mikrut, C. Ye, USA
385-P LUTEIN IS APPARENTLY ABSORBED BY A CARRIER-MEDIATED TRANSPORT PROCESS IN CACO-2 CELLSE. Reboul, L. Abou, C. Mikail, O. Ghiringhelli, M. André, B. Gleize, J. Kaloustian, H. Portugal, M. Amiot, P. Borel, France
386-P THE EFFECT OF LIGHT AND TEMPERATURE ON PARENTERAL LIPID EMULSIONS AND VITAMIN STABILITYA. G. Cosslett, E. Wighton, United Kingdom
387-P STABILITY OF L-GLUTAMINE AFTER GAMMA IRRADIATIONG. Hardy, V. Ilic, United Kingdom
388-P EVALUATION OF THE MICROBIAL SAFETY OF A NEW 1.5 L ENTERAL FEEDING POUCH SYSTEMJ. C. Desport, M. Mounier, P. M. Preux, K. Makabakayele, M. Fort, B. Dorigny, P. Van Dael, France
389-P STABILITY OF RANITIDINE IN PARENTERAL NUTRITION ADMIXTURES (PNAS)A. G. Cosslett, R. Price, United Kingdom
390-P WARFARIN BIOAVAILABILITY WITH FEEDING TUBES AND FORMULAM. G. Klang, D. Graham, V. Mclymont, J. Sharpe, R. Barrera, USA
391-P IMPACT OF CONTAINER MATERIAL ON TOTAL NUTRIENT ADMIXTURE STABILITYM. B. Baker, B. Mikrut, C. Ye, USA
392-P USING STANDARDISED NOT COMMERCIAL FORMULAS IN PARENTERAL NUTRITION (TPN). CHANGES FROMPREDESIGNED COMPOSITIONJ. J. Alfaro, C. Lamas, A. Hernández, M. A. Salas, A. Díez, F. Gómez, F. Botella, Spain
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