To unlock this feature and to subscribe to our weekly evidence emails, please create a FREE orthoEvidence account.

SIGNUP

Already Have an Account?

Loading...
Visit our Evidence-Based Covid-19 Website and Stay Up to Date with the latest Research.
Ace Report Cover

Oral nutritional supplements provide clinical benefits in hip fractures

Download
Share
Reprints
Cite This
About
+ Favorites
Share
Reprints
Cite This
About
+ Favorites
Author Verified
Ace Report Cover
April 2013

Oral nutritional supplements provide clinical benefits in hip fractures

Vol: 2| Issue: 3| Number:17| ISSN#: 2564-2537
Study Type:Therapy
OE Level Evidence:2
Journal Level of Evidence:N/A

Clinical benefits of oral nutritional supplementation for elderly hip fracture patients: a single blind randomised controlled trial

Age Ageing. 2013 Jan;42(1):39-45. doi: 10.1093/ageing/afs078. Epub 2012 Jun 8

Contributing Authors:
MW Myint J Wu E Wong SP Chan TS To MW Chau KH Ting PM Fung KS Au

Did you know you're eligible to earn 0.5 CME credits for reading this report? Click Here

OE EXCLUSIVE

Dr. Myint discusses the use of oral supplementation for elderly hip fracture patients

Synopsis

126 elderly, post-surgical, proximal femoral fracture patients were recruited to two groups: one receiving hospital diet alone and the other receiving additional oral liquid nutritional supplementation (18-24g protein and 500kcal per day) to assess if the addition of an oral nutritional supplement improved clinical outcomes. Results at discharge from rehabilitation and at 4 week follow-up demonstr...

CME Image

Did you know that you’re eligible to earn 0.5 CME credits for reading this report!

LEARN MORE

Join the Conversation

Please Login or Join to leave comments.

Learn about our AI Driven
High Impact Search Feature

High Impact Icon

Our AI driven High Impact metric calculates the impact an article will have by considering both the publishing journal and the content of the article itself. Built using the latest advances in natural language processing, OE High Impact predicts an article’s future number of citations better than impact factor alone.

Continue