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Personalized Nutrition Strategies for Patients in the Intensive Care Unit: A Narrative Review on the Future of Critical Care Nutrition - PubMed

Personalized Nutrition Strategies for Patients in the Intensive Care Unit: A Narrative Review on the Future of Critical Care Nutrition - PubMed

Source : https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40431399/

Introduction: Critically ill patients in intensive care units (ICUs) are at high risk of malnutrition, which can result in muscle atrophy, polyneuropathy, increased mortality, or prolonged hospitalizations with complications and...

Review highlights importance of early, personalized ICU nutrition using enteral feeding, adequate protein, and AI/metabolomics integration to improve outcomes, reduce complications, and enable precise, multidisciplinary nutritional care.

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How do safety and tolerability influence obesity treatment decisions?

Obesity management has evolved with newer pharmacologic therapies demonstrating meaningful efficacy, yet safety and tolerability remain central to treatment selection. Adverse effects, patient preferences, and long-term adherence all influence whether a treatment is started, continued, or switched in routine practice.

Gastrointestinal adverse events are among the most commonly reported considerations with current pharmacologic therapies for obesity, including nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. These effects are often mild to moderate and more frequent during dose escalation, but they can still affect treatment persistence. Safety profiles vary across therapeutic classes, and clinicians must also consider less common adverse events, such as gastrointestinal complications or gallbladder-related events, as well as class-specific considerations that may require monitoring.

Patient factors should guide therapy choice, including comorbidities, prior treatment experience, weight-loss goals, and the likelihood of sustained adherence. In practice, the most appropriate option is often the one that best balances efficacy with an acceptable safety profile for the individual patient.

How do you weigh efficacy versus tolerability when selecting pharmacologic therapies for obesity? What patient factors most influence your decision to initiate or switch treatment in obesity management?

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  • Yesterday
    efficacy with glp-1 class has never been an issue with injectables and orals but tolerability is always of concern. Usually oral GLP-1s are hard to tolerate and most people require Show More
  • Yesterday
    I discuss with the patient the possible side effects that may limit the with ability to tolerate the medicine. If they have a poor diet and don’t exercise, it will Show More
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Integrating oral GLP-1 pathways into obesity care: clinical decisions beyond initiation

As obesity care continues to evolve, clinical focus is shifting from initiating therapy to managing obesity as a long-term, relapsing condition. Recent advances in oral glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist development reinforce this shift, prompting clinicians to consider not only whether to use pharmacologic therapy, but how it can be integrated into sustained, multidimensional care plans over time.

GLP-1 receptor activation influences appetite regulation, satiety signaling, and metabolic pathways central to obesity pathophysiology. Oral formulations demonstrate that these mechanisms can be engaged through daily administration, expanding how clinicians think about treatment design and long-term engagement. This evolution brings renewed attention to clinical integration—how pharmacologic therapy aligns with behavioral strategies, lifestyle interventions, and ongoing monitoring rather than functioning as a stand-alone solution.

Patient selection and adherence remain central considerations in long-term obesity management. Functional factors such as daily dosing routines, gastrointestinal tolerability, and treatment fatigue—as well as emotional factors including expectations, motivation, and prior weight-loss experiences—may influence sustained use and outcomes. These considerations highlight the importance of shared decision-making and regular reassessment as patient needs and priorities evolve.

Rather than viewing therapy choice as a single decision point, many clinicians are approaching obesity care as a dynamic process that requires adjustment over time. Evidence-based strategies increasingly emphasize structured follow-up, realistic goal-setting, behavioral support, and coordinated, multidisciplinary care. Within this framework, oral GLP-1 approaches may offer flexibility across different phases of treatment, including escalation, stabilization, or maintenance.

What factors most influence how you select patients for long-term pharmacologic obesity therapy?As oral GLP-1 options enter clinical practice, what adherence challenges or integration considerations will most shape how you incorporate them into comprehensive obesity care?

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  • 2d
    Percentage of weight loss desired and needle phobia are key factors . Magnitude of GI adverse side effects alo plays a role to ensure successful titration
  • 1w
    GLP-1 therapy is good for obese PT’s. I am concerned about the long term side effects. There have been some reports on the news media about weakness in the lower Show More

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Did you know? Childhood obesity disrupts multiple endocrine pathways, leading to insulin resistance, hormonal imbalances, and increased risk of early-onset metabolic and cardiovascular complications. These changes can also impact growth, puberty, and long-term health trajectories.

Could early endocrine-focused interventions in obesity help prevent long-term metabolic and cardiovascular disease progression?

 NCCN Guidelines

Could early endocrine-focused interventions in obesity help prevent long-term metabolic and cardiovascular disease progression?

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Obesity accelerates cardiovascular ageing - PubMed

Obesity accelerates cardiovascular ageing - PubMed

Source : https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40197620/

A global obesity pandemic, coupled with an increasingly ageing population, is exacerbating the burden of cardiovascular disease. Indeed, clinical and experimental evidence underscores a potential connection between obesity and ageing...

Obesity accelerates cardiovascular aging through shared mechanisms like inflammation and mitochondrial dysfunction; weight reduction and metabolic therapies may counteract these processes, reducing cardiovascular disease risk and improving longevity.

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