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      A.S.P.E.N. position paper: recommendations for changes in commercially available parenteral multivitamin and multi-trace element products.

      Nutrition in clinical practice : official publication of the American Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition
      Avitaminosis, drug therapy, Carnitine, administration & dosage, Choline, Dietary Supplements, Dietetics, standards, Guidelines as Topic, Humans, Nutritional Requirements, Parenteral Nutrition, Parenteral Nutrition Solutions, Trace Elements, deficiency, United States, United States Food and Drug Administration, Vitamins

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          Abstract

          The parenteral multivitamin preparations that are commercially available in the United States (U.S.) meet the requirements for most patients who receive parenteral nutrition (PN). However, a separate parenteral vitamin D preparation (cholecalciferol or ergocalciferol) should be made available for treatment of patients with vitamin D deficiency unresponsive to oral vitamin D supplementation. Carnitine is commercially available and should be routinely added to neonatal PN formulations. Choline should also be routinely added to adult and pediatric PN formulations; however, a commercially available parenteral product needs to be developed. The parenteral multi-trace element (TE) preparations that are commercially available in the U.S. require significant modifications. Single-entity trace element products can be used to meet individual patient needs when the multiple-element products are inappropriate (see Summary/A.S.P.E.N. Recommendations section for details of these proposed modifications).

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