AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how nutrition is assessed and managed for hospitalized heart failure patients by surveying 147 cardiologists across 32 institutions, with a high response rate of 95%.
  • Results revealed that while 78.2% of cardiologists performed nutritional assessments, only 38.3% used objective tools and a mere 9.5% evaluated for cardiac cachexia.
  • Although 89.8% provided nutritional education before discharge, focus was primarily on sodium and water restrictions, with less attention to protein, micronutrients, and caloric intake, indicating a need for more comprehensive and tailored nutritional guidance.

Article Abstract

Although nutritional assessment and education are important for hospitalized patients with heart failure, the extent of their implementation in real-world clinical practice is unknown. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate the evaluation and management of nutrition during hospitalization for heart failure using a questionnaire survey for cardiologists.In this cross-sectional multicenter survey, 147 cardiologists from 32 institutions completed a web-based questionnaire (response rate, 95%).The survey showed that 78.2% of the respondents performed a nutritional assessment for hospitalized patients, whereas 38.3% used objective tools. In contrast, only 9.5% of the respondents evaluated the presence or absence of cardiac cachexia. Most respondents (89.8%) reported providing nutritional education to their patients before hospital discharge. However, compared with the number of respondents who provided information on sodium (97.0%) and water (63.6%) restrictions, a limited number of respondents provided guidance on optimal protein (20.5%) and micronutrient (9.1%) intake as part of the nutritional education. Less than 50% of the respondents provided guidance on optimal calorie intake (43.2%) and ideal body weight (34.8%) as a part of the nutritional education for patients identified as malnourished.Although nutritional assessment is widely performed for hospitalized patients with heart failure, most assessments are subjective rather than objective. Nutritional education, frequently provided before hospital discharge, is limited to information on water or salt intake restrictions. Therefore, more comprehensive and individualized nutritional assessments and counselling with a scientific basis are required.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1536/ihj.23-462DOI Listing

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