Part 7 Flashcards

1
Q

Starvation definition

A

physiological condition created in the body as a consequence of chronic insufficient food intake

Physiological: adaptive to promote survival

Pathological: adaptation is compromised

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2
Q

Ethical barriers to studying malnutrition

A

Obligation to do no harm - must treat rather than observe
- offer best standard of care as the control

Double-blind randomized controlled clinical trials
- drug trials but no malnutrition

Malnutrition is often multi-nutrient, no biomarkers for mild deficiency, subclinical infections

Zinc deficiency can be mistaken for PEM

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3
Q

Ancel Keys 1950’s experiments on starvation

What they did, body composition changes and metabolic flux after 6 months

A

1500 kcal per day and 50g protein per day for 6 months (low energy and low protein)

~23% weight loss, ~24% lean tissue loss, ~71% fat loss, 4% increase in extracellular fluid

Rate of lean tissue and fat loss was 0 after 6 months (successful adaptation and stable body comp)

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4
Q

Metabolic response to starvation from Ancel Keys 1950 experiment

A

Reduced resting energy expenditure:
- reduced per unit of tissue within days
- reduced mass of metabolically active tissue within weeks
- reduced heart rate and muscle tone

Reduced non-resting energy expenditure:
- reduced work of movement with lower body weight
- reduced voluntary movement

Reduced protein requirement:
- diminished lean tissue
- increased retention of dietary protein
- stabilization of lean tissue mass (0 rate of change)

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5
Q

Cellular regulation in starvation Gcn2

A

↑ Gcn2 = general control nonderepressible 2 (protein kinase) - protein synthesis regulation

1) inhibits general translation by phosphorylation of elF-2alpha

2) binds uncharged tRNA

3) general inhibition of translation

4) down-regulates genes regulating fatty acid and triglyceride synthesis through SREBP-1c

5) delays entry into S phase of cell cycle

Overall inhibition of anabolism

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6
Q

Cellular regulation in starvation AMPK

A

AMPK = 5’ AMP-activated protein kinase

1) Senses high [AMP], energy charge of cell

2) inhibits mTORC1

3) ↓ protein synthesis

4) ↓ genes regulating fatty acid and triglyceride synthesis via SREBP-1c

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7
Q

Definition of successful adaptation (physiological)

A

Accomplished through: Making physiological changes to reduce energy and protein requirement for homeostasis

Benefit: survival

Cost: lean tissue loss, fatigue and inactivity, immunodeficiency, reduced stress tolerance, irritability

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8
Q

Clinical features of PEM

A
  • reduced body weight
  • muscle wasting
  • reduced respiratory and cardiac muscular capacity
  • skin thinning
  • ↓ metabolic rate
  • hypothermia
  • apathy
  • edema
  • immunodeficiency
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9
Q

Pathophysiology of PEM

A

Adaptive mechanisms: reduce protein stores, reduce metabolic rate
- hypotension, bradycardia (slow HR), hypothermia

Successful adaptation: 0 protein/energy balance, normal serum albumin

Failed adaptation: continued protein/fat loss, hypoalbuminemia, immune deficiency
- can be following any additional stressors including metabolic stress, micronutrient deficiency or too severe starvation

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10
Q

Dutch famine

Dutch famine birth cohort study

A

1944-1945 sudden onset famine in German-occupied Netherlands due to cut off from food and fuel shipments
- 4.5 million affected, 22,000 died
- Pregnant women heavily affected, studies done following babies in utero at the time later

Study:
- intrauterine restricted growth (IUGR)
- ↑ chronic diseases, their own infants were IUGR, Barker hypothesis epigenetic changes

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11
Q

First 1000 days

A

1) A nutritious diet for pregnant mothers
2) Good care for pregnant mothers
3) 6 months exclusive breast feeding
4) Nurturing, responsive care of babies and toddlers
5) Good food introduction timing
6) Healthy and nutritious diet for babies and toddlers
7) Paid time off for working parents
8) Education for parents and caregivers
9) Consistent access to nutritious food for young children
10) Societal investments in well-being of babies/toddlers

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12
Q

Edematous undernutrition

A

Considered a non-successful adaptation
Fluid leaking from capillaries pools
Lowered muscle tone leads to inability to circulate blood
Pitting edema

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13
Q

Common infections with undernourished patients

A

Diarrhea
Pneumonia
UTI
Measles
Tuberculosis
Parasitic infections - worsen anemia and GI infections

Symptoms: ↓ antibodies, ↓ hemoglobin (anemia), dysentery, fever, fluid imbalances (heart failure and death)

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14
Q

Medical nutrition therapy for undernourished patients

A

1) restore fluid/electrolyte imbalances

2) cautious nutrition intervention, slow protein ↑

3) treat infections

4) Involve local communities

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15
Q

What causes unsuccessful adaptation to malnutrition?

A

Add a micronutrient deficiency or a stress or surgery

Including: cancer, trauma, inflammation/infection
- increases energy expenditure/requirements and nitrogen output (catabolism)

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16
Q

Sarcopenia - 6 causes

A

CHOPIN
1) Cachexia - cancer, system inflammation
2) Hormonal excess or deficiency
3) Old age sarcopenia
4) PEM - starvation
5) Inactivity - disuse atrophy
6) Neuromuscular disease