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RESEARCH PRODUCT
The final word on nutritional screening and assessment in older persons
Riccardo CaccialanzaEmanuele CeredaNicola Veronesesubject
0301 basic medicineGerontologyRiskAgingSarcopeniaCachexiaFrail ElderlyMEDLINEMedicine (miscellaneous)03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineMedicineHumansFrail elderly030212 general & internal medicinePatient complianceGeriatric AssessmentAgedAged 80 and over030109 nutrition & dieteticsNutrition and DieteticsNutrition assessmentEvidence-Based MedicineMuscle Weaknessbusiness.industryMalnutritionGeriatric assessmentEvidence-based medicinebody composition frailty inflammation nutritional assessment nutritional screening sarcopeniaPrognosisNutrition AssessmentElder Nutritional Physiological PhenomenaPatient ComplianceDiet HealthybusinessElder Nutritional Physiological Phenomenadescription
Purpose of review: To provide an updated perspective of how nutritional screening and assessment in older persons should be performed and reasonably implemented in the near future. Recent findings: Although nutritional screening and assessment should be fast and easy procedures, there is increasing evidence that more time should be dedicated to them. This is probably an answer to the claim to a medicine being more preventive than curative. Increasing interest is currently given to healthy aging and nutritional status is more likely to be addressed for its implications on functional status and disability. Important prognostic conditions, such as frailty, sarcopenia, and cachexia, which are closely linked to the nutritional domain, are at the top of the agenda. Therefore, body composition is a key issue and functional status is suggested as primary endpoint of nutrition trials. In this scenario, there is also a rationale for systematic assessment of inflammation, protein intake, and vitamin D status as potential contributing factors to reduced muscle mass and function. Summary: A 'second-generation' multidimensional nutritional screening and assessment including the evaluation of body composition, frailty, sarcopenia, and cachexia could be hypothesized. Nutritional assessment should be also completed by the systematic evaluation of inflammation, protein intake, and vitamin D status. Copyright © 2017 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-10-17 |