Paul E Wischmeyer

Paul E Wischmeyer
Duke University | DU · Department of Anesthesiology

M.D.

About

377
Publications
172,681
Reads
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14,648
Citations
Introduction
My groups research focus is in perioperative care, critical care, and nutrition to help patients prepare and recover from illness and surgery. Key interests include perioperative optimization, nutrition therapy, ICU recovery, lean body mass/functional recovery, and probiotics/microbiome. Our work and grant funded projects span the range of translational research from basic mechanistic work in cellular systems and in vivo modeling to large multi-center randomized clinical trials with the DCRI.
Additional affiliations
November 2016 - November 2016
Duke University
Position
  • Professor (Full)
June 2000 - July 2001
University of Chicago
Position
  • Clinical Pharmacology Fellow
Description
  • Clinical Pharmacology Research Fellow
June 1997 - June 2000
University of Chicago
Position
  • Medical Doctor
Description
  • Resident in Anesthesiology Critical Care Fellow Clinical Pharmacology Fellow
Education
June 2000 - July 2001
University of Chicago
Field of study
  • Critical Care Fellowship Training
September 1992 - June 1996
University of Chicago
Field of study
  • Medicine (M.D. with Honors)

Publications

Publications (377)
Article
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Background Critically ill patients have considerable oxidative stress. Glutamine and antioxidant supplementation may offer therapeutic benefit, although current data are conflicting. Methods In this blinded 2-by-2 factorial trial, we randomly assigned 1223 critically ill adults in 40 intensive care units (ICUs) in Canada, the United States, and Eur...
Article
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Perioperative malnutrition has proven to be challenging to define, diagnose, and treat. Despite these challenges, it is well known that suboptimal nutritional status is a strong independent predictor of poor postoperative outcomes. Although perioperative caregivers consistently express recognition of the importance of nutrition screening and optimi...
Article
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Abstract Personalization of ICU nutrition is essential to future of critical care. Recommendations from American/European guidelines and practice suggestions incorporating recent literature are presented. Low-dose enteral nutrition (EN) or parenteral nutrition (PN) can be started within 48 h of admission. While EN is preferred route of delivery, ne...
Article
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Importance: Critically ill pediatric patients often require parenteral nutrition (PN) in the intensive care unit (ICU). Literature suggests mixed lipid emulsions (LE) with soybean oil reduction strategies may improve outcomes. Objective: To examine the association of a hospital-wide switch to a mixed-lipid formula (4-OLE) with pediatric outcomes...
Article
The intensive care unit (ICU) environment is one of the most challenging for skeletal muscle health. The atrophy associated with clinical care is distinct from that seen with inactivity or immobilization in the absence of disease and is exacerbated by aging. The substantial muscle loss in the ICU is likely due to the presence of inflammation, eleva...
Article
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Background This Rapid Practice Guideline (RPG) aimed to provide evidence‐based recommendations for ketamine analgo‐sedation (monotherapy and adjunct) versus non‐ketamine sedatives or usual care in adult intensive care unit (ICU) patients on invasive mechanical ventilation (iMV) and to identify knowledge gaps for future research. Methods The RPG pa...
Article
Background This Rapid Practice Guideline (RPG) aimed to provide evidence‑based recommendations for ketamine analgo-sedation (monotherapy and adjunct) versus non-ketamine sedatives or usual care in adult intensive care unit (ICU) patients on invasive mechanical ventilation (iMV) and to identify knowledge gaps for future research. Methods The RPG pa...
Article
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Background: Sarcopenia has been recognized as a determining factor in surgical outcomes and is associated with an increased risk of postoperative complications and readmission. Diagnosis is currently based on clinical guidelines, which includes assessment of skeletal muscle mass but not quality. Ultrasound has been proposed as a useful point-of-car...
Article
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In critical illness the regulation of inflammation and oxidative stress can improve patient outcomes, and thus omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) have been used as part of parenteral nutrition (PN) owing to their potential anti-inflammatory effects. The international lipids in PN Summit, encompassed discussions and the production of consen...
Article
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Background The cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPET) is considered a gold standard in assessing cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) but has limited accessibility due to competency requirements and cost. Incorporating portable sensor devices into a simple bedside test of CRF could improve diagnostic and prognostic value. Objectives The authors sought to...
Article
Background Intensive care unit (ICU) protein benchmarks are based on mortality and morbidity; whether these targets also support functional recovery is unknown. We assessed whether different protein doses influenced patients' functional capacity, measured by the Chelsea Physical Assessment score (CPAx). Methods Single‐center retrospective cohort s...
Article
RATIONALE Critically ill adults can develop stress-related mucosal damage from gastrointestinal hypoperfusion and reperfusion injury, predisposing them to clinically important stress-related upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB). OBJECTIVES The objective of this guideline was to develop evidence-based recommendations for the prevention of UGIB in...
Article
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Purpose of Review Disparities in malnutrition often exist prior to hospitalization or illness. These disparities may compound unjust negative health outcomes. This review discusses disparities seen in those diagnosed with malnutrition as well as describes the existing, while sparse, findings of differential allocation of nutritional therapies both...
Preprint
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Background Gut microbial dysbiosis in the intensive care unit (ICU) is common, and certain changes, such as expansion of Enterobacteriaceae and other microbes with high pathogenic potential (pathobionts), are associated with increased risk of infection and death. Enteral nutrition (EN) with prebiotic short-chain fructooligosaccharides (scFOS-EN) pr...
Article
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Purpose Parenteral nutrition (PN) is an established therapy when oral/enteral feeding is not sufficient or is contraindicated, but nevertheless PN remains a complex, high-alert medication that is susceptible to errors that may affect patient safety. Over time, considerable progress has been made to make PN practices safer. The purpose of this artic...
Article
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Purpose This article is based on presentations and discussions held at the International Safety and Quality of Parenteral Nutrition (PN) Summit concerning the acute care setting. Some European practices presented in this article do not conform with USP general chapter <797> requirements. Nevertheless, the purpose is to cover the challenges experien...
Article
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Purpose The International Safety and Quality of Parenteral Nutrition (PN) Summit consisted of presentations, discussions, and formulation of consensus statements. The purpose here is to briefly summarize the summit and to present the consensus statements. Summary There was a high degree of consensus, with all statements approved by all authors/sum...
Article
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Purpose This article is based on presentations and discussions held at the International Safety and Quality of Parenteral Nutrition (PN) Summit (held November 8-10, 2021, at Charleston, SC, and Bad Homburg, Germany) and aims to raise awareness concerning unresolved issues associated with the PN process and potential future directions, including a g...
Article
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Myosteatosis assessed with CT is known to be associated with reduced Cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF). Musculoskeletal Ultrasound (MSK-US) is a non-invasive bedside point-of-care (POC) method used to assess muscle morphology and mass. MuscleSound can assess myosteatosis (%intramuscular adipose tissue) and area by analyzing ultrasound dicom images. T...
Conference Paper
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Critically ill COVID-19 patients are particularly susceptible to ICU-acquired weakness (ICU-AW), characterized by skeletal muscle atrophy and weakness linked to polyneuropathy (CIN), myopathy (CIM), and muscle atrophy. ICU-AW is attributed to physical inactivity, systemic inflammation, hyperglycemia, and drug treatments, all prevalent in severe COV...
Conference Paper
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Musculoskeletal Ultrasound (MSK-US) has gained recognition as a non-invasive point-of-care (POC) method for real-time assessment of muscle health parameters including morphology, histology, and mass. Among the tools used in this domain, MuscleSound stands out for its capability to evaluate intramuscular glycogen levels through its MuscleSound Fuel-...
Article
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Introduction Although allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HCT) can be a curative therapy for hematologic disorders, it is associated with treatment-related complications and losses in cardiorespiratory fitness and physical function. High-intensity interval training (HIIT) may be a practical way to rapidly improve cardiorespiratory f...
Article
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Background CONCISE is an internationally agreed minimum set of outcomes for use in nutritional and metabolic clinical research in critically ill adults. Clinicians and researchers need to be aware of the clinimetric properties of these instruments and understand any limitations to ensure valid and reliable research. This systematic review and meta-...
Article
Introduction: Severe traumatic injury requires rapid and extensive deployment of resources to save the lives of the critically injured. The sequelae of traumatic injuries frequently require extensive intervention obligating patients to a complicated recovery process devoid of meaningful nutrition. In this setting, parenteral nutrition (PN) is key i...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background: CONCISE is an internationally agreed minimum set of outcomes for use in nutritional and metabolic clinical research in critically ill adults. Clinicians and researchers need to be aware of the clinimetric properties of these instruments and understand any limitations to ensure valid and reliable research. This systematic review and meta...
Article
Background: Critically ill patients frequently accrue substantial nutritional deficits due to multiple episodes of prolonged fasting prior to procedures. Existing literature suggests that for most patients receiving tube feeding the aspiration risk is low. Yet, national and international guidelines do not address fasting times for tube feeding, pr...
Article
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Background: Preoperative fasting and surgery cause metabolic stress, insulin resistance with ketosis, and postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV). Oral carbohydrate loading strategy (CHO) improves outcomes in labor and general surgery. We aimed to compare the effectiveness of CHO with standard fasting in patients undergoing elective cesarean deli...
Article
Purpose: Nutritional therapy is essential to ICU care. Successful early enteral feeding is hindered by lack of protocols, gastrointestinal intolerance and feeding interruptions, leading to impaired nutritional intake. smART+ was developed as a nutrition management feeding platform controlling tube positioning, reflux, gastric pressure, and malnutr...
Article
Abstract Background Incidence of, and potential risk factors for, postoperative gastrointestinal dysfunction (POGD) after gastrointestinal procedures performed in US hospitals were examined. Methods This retrospective study used hospital discharge data of inpatients who underwent ≥1 gastrointestinal procedures from 1-Jan-2016 to 30-Apr-2019. POGD...
Article
Purpose of review: Recently, clinicians have shown interest in switching patients to nonsoybean-based intravenous lipid emulsion (ILE) formulas for parental nutrition (PN) due to adverse outcomes related to high Omega-6 content in soybean oil (SO) ILE's. This review summarizes recent literature on improved clinical outcomes with new Omega-6 lipid-...
Conference Paper
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Background: Indirect calorimetry (IC) is the gold-standard procedure for measuring resting energy expenditure (REE) in hospitalized patients. Predictive energy equations commonly use static variables and rarely account for changes in REE throughout hospitalization. We hypothesize that predictive equations are typically inaccurate in surgical intens...
Preprint
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INTRODUCTION: Data suggest that guidelines for enteral nutrition (EN) initiation are not closely followed in clinical practice. In addition, critically ill mechanically ventilated (MV) patients have varying metabolic needs, which often increase and persist over time, requiring personalized nutrition intervention. While both over- and under-nutritio...
Article
Introduction: Glutamine (GLN) and n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n-3PUFAs) have been shown to potentially possess immune-modulating and disease-modifying properties in experimental and clinical critical illness when given with parenteral nutrition (PN). However, we recently showed in experimental cancer models that combinations of GLN/n-3 PUFA m...
Article
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Preoperative nutrition status is an important determinant of surgical outcomes, yet malnutrition assessment is not integrated into all surgical pathways. Given its importance and the high prevalence of malnutrition in patients undergoing surgical procedures, preoperative nutrition screening, assessment, and intervention are needed to improve postop...
Article
Patients requiring complex or extensive surgery are often at high risk for perioperative and postoperative nutrition risk. Despite published guidelines, providing adequate nutrition to these patients continues to remain a clinical challenge. Using the case of a patient with preoperative nutrition risk who will need to undergo timely cancer resectio...
Article
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Introduction: Early data suggest use of a mixed lipid emulsion (LE) with a soybean oil reduction strategy in parenteral nutrition (PN) may improve clinical outcomes. Duke University Hospital made a full switch to a Soybean oil/MCT/Olive/Fish Oil lipid (4-OLE) from pure soybean oil-based LE (Intralipid, Baxter Inc) in May 2017. Since 4-OLE has limi...
Article
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Background Clinical research on nutritional and metabolic interventions in critically ill patients is heterogenous regarding time points, outcomes and measurement instruments used, impeding intervention development and data syntheses, and ultimately worsening clinical outcomes. We aimed to identify and develop a set of core outcome domains and asso...
Preprint
Full-text available
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to pose unprecedented challenges to worldwide health. While vaccines are effective, additional strategies to mitigate the spread/severity of COVID-19 are urgently needed. Emerging evidence suggests susceptibility to respiratory tract infections in healthy subjects can be reduced by probiotic interventions; therefore,...
Article
Purpose: Manual measurement of body composition on computed tomography (CT) is time-consuming, limiting its clinical use. We validate a software program, Automatic Body composition Analyzer using Computed tomography image Segmentation (ABACS), for the automated measurement of body composition by comparing its performance to manual segmentation in...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background: Clinical research on nutritional and metabolic interventions in critically ill patients is heterogenous regarding time points, outcomes and measurement instruments used, impeding intervention development and data syntheses, and ultimately worsening clinical outcomes. We aimed to identify and develop a set of core outcome domains and ass...
Article
Background : Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HCT) is a potentially curative treatment for both malignant and non-malignant hematologic diseases; however, rates of treatment-related mortality (TRM) approach 30%. Outcomes are worse in patients who begin HCT with functional impairments. Objective : To detect impairments, a geriatr...
Article
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Background & Aims Continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) is essential to the management of acute kidney injury (AKI) in critical illness. Unfortunately, large quantities of micronutrients are shown to be lost in CRRT effluent. Current literature describes serum micronutrient values in CRRT patients to be below-reference range, yet seldom compa...
Article
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OBJECTIVES:. Current guidance recommends initiation of early enteral nutrition (early EN) within 24–36 hours of ICU admission in critically ill COVID-19 patients. Despite this recommendation, there is quite limited evidence describing the effect of early EN on outcomes in COVID-19 patients. The association between early EN (within 3 d post intubati...
Article
Robert G. Martindale has received honoraria from Baxter, Fresenius Kabi, and Nestle, and acted as an advisory board member for Nestle. Stanislaw Klek has received speaker's honoraria from Baxter, Braun, Fresenius Kabi, Nestle, Nutricia, Shire, and Vipharm, and acted as an advisory board member for Fresenius Kabi, Shire, and Tracheron. Zudin Puthuch...
Article
Full-text available
Undergoing surgery is one of the greatest physical and emotional challenges a patient can face, and doing so without preparation can lead to increased complications and mortality. At JADPRO Live Virtual 2021, Paul Wischmeyer, MD, EDIC, FCCM, FASPEN, emphasized the concepts of nutritional optimization and exercise optimization as being crucial and e...
Article
Full-text available
Purpose of Review Preoperative malnutrition is common in surgical patients and occurs in up to two-in-three major gastrointestinal and cancer surgery patients. Perioperative malnutrition is well-known to be associated with adverse clinical outcomes following major surgery. Yet, malnutrition is seldom screened for before surgery worldwide. This worl...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic continues to pose unprecedented challenges to worldwide health. While vaccines are effective, supplemental strategies to mitigate the spread and severity of COVID-19 are urgently needed. Emerging evidence suggests susceptibility to infections, including respiratory tract infections, may be reduced by probiotic inte...
Article
Background: Preoperative nutrition risk is often underrecognized and undertreated. The Perioperative Nutrition Screen (PONS) was recently introduced as an efficient tool to rapidly screen for preoperative nutritional risk. The relationship between identification of "nutritional risk" via PONS and adverse outcomes postoperatively remains undescribe...
Article
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The preferential use of the oral/enteral route in critically ill patients over gut rest is uniformly recommended and applied. This article provides practical guidance on enteral nutrition in compliance with recent American and European guidelines. Low-dose enteral nutrition can be safely started within 48 h after admission, even during treatment wi...
Article
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Targeted nutritional therapy should be started early in severe illness and sustained through to recovery if clinical and patient-centred outcomes are to be optimised. The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has shone a light on this need. The literature on nutrition and COVID-19 mainly focuses on the importance of nutrition to preserve lif...
Article
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Currently, there is a lack of consensus on the provision of preoperative carbohydrate loading in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) due to theoretical concerns including the possibility of delayed gastric emptying, perioperative hyperglycemia, and poor surgical outcomes. This narrative review summarizes the accumulating evidence on preop...
Article
Full-text available
Background & Aims Indirect calorimetry (IC) is the gold-standard for determining measured resting energy expenditure (mREE) in critical illness. When IC is not available, predicted resting energy expenditure (pREE) equations are commonly utilized, which often inaccurately predict metabolic demands leading to over- or under-feeding. This study aims...
Article
Full-text available
Purpose of review: Malnutrition is frequent in patients with acute kidney injury. Nutrient clearance during renal replacement therapy (RRT) potentially contributes to this complication. Although losses of amino acid, trace elements and vitamins have been described, there is no clear guidance regarding the role of micronutrient supplementation. Re...