Protein Energy Malnutrition Flashcards

1
Q

spectrum of manifestations depends on what 5 factors?

A
severity
duration
age
cause
association w/ other problems
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2
Q

maramus

A

simple wasting of fat and muscle mass due to energy deficiency

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3
Q

kwashiorkor

A
  • edematous without wasting and is attributed to protein deficiency
  • related to metabolic stress and inflammation
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4
Q

marasmic kwashiorkor

A

combination of chronic energy deficiency with chronic or acute protein deficit manifested as wasting and edema

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5
Q

global burden malnutrition

A
  • poor nutrition causes half of deaths of children under the age of 5
  • 1/5 global disease burden attributed to effects of protein energy malnutrition and micronutrient deficiency
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6
Q

FTT

A

mild protein energy malnutrition

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7
Q

malnutrition occurs in what percentage of hospitalized patients

A

50%

-is associated with higher rates of morbidity and mortality and longer hospital stays

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8
Q

anorexia nervosa

A
  • represent a successful adaptation to starvation
  • less than critical total lean tissue depletion, weight stability, normal plasma albumin, normal peripheral blood total lymphocyte count, intact immune response
  • susceptible to abrupt decompensation with minor insult
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9
Q

5 at risk groups for protein energy malnutrition

A
  1. 0-12mths: marasmus/severe wasting
  2. 12-24mths: kwashiorkor/ edematous PEM
  3. Older children: stunting common; milder wasting
  4. pregnant/lactating women: PEM
  5. Elderly: PEM
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10
Q

wasting deficit is represented by what ratio

A

weight for height

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11
Q

stunting deficit is represented by what ratio

A

height for age

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12
Q

alternative use of z scores

A

Stunting:

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13
Q

clinical features

marasmus > kwashiorkor

A

weight loss
loss of muscle
loss of fat

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14
Q

clinical features that are absent in marasmus

A

edema
hepatomegaly
skin lesions

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15
Q

+/- in marasmus but present in kwashiorkor

A

anorexia

hair changes

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16
Q

clinical features

kwashiorkor > marasmus

A

psychological impairment
infections

+/- in kwashiorkor:
anorexia
hair changes

absent in marasmus:
edema
hepatomegaly
skin lesions

17
Q

clinical feature

marasmus = kwashiorkor

A

diarrhea

18
Q

6 physiologic responses to severe acute malnutrition: marasmus

A
  1. decreased energy expenditure (decreased activity, bradycardia, hypothermia)
  2. decreased Na pump activity
  3. fuel utilization to mobilization body fat (increased ketones, decreased gluconeogenesis)
  4. muscle protein catabolism (decreased overall protein turnover)
  5. decreased inflammatory response/ immune fxn
  6. impaired GI fxn (dismotility, malnutrition)
19
Q

hallmarks of adaptation to severe PEM

A
  1. loss of functional reserve

2. loss of physiological responsiveness

20
Q

pathophysiology of kwashiorkor

A

failure of normal adaptive response of protein sparing normally seen in fasting state

21
Q

contributing factors to kwashiorkor

A

infectious stress, cytokine release, relative micronutrient deficiencies, free radical exposure, oxidative damage

-possible role of microbiome

22
Q

why would some assume that nutritional status is adequate in kwashiorkor?

A

fat reserves and muscle mass unaltered

23
Q

Signs of kwashiorkor

A
  • Flaky paint: skin lesions
  • Flag sign: hair texture/ color change
  • moon facies: generalized edema
24
Q

5 metabolic derangements associated with kwashiorkor

A
  1. hypoalbuminemia & enlarged fatty liver –> edema
  2. Increased permeability of biological cell membranes –> edema
  3. impaired Na/K homeostasis (Na excess, K deficiency)
  4. hypotransferrinemia (anemia)
  5. Impaired immune system (infection)
25
Q

things to avoid when resolving life threatening conditions in PEM

A

over-hydration
excessive Na
hypoglycemia

26
Q

resolving life threatening conditions in PEM

A
  1. restore circulation with enteral
  2. K+ supplements (+/-) Mg
  3. treat infections
  4. small, frequent oral feeds
27
Q

restore nutritional status

A

Goal= Maintain

-small, frequent

28
Q

Nutritional rehabilitation

A
  • advance energy intake to 1.5X normal and 3-4X protein needs
  • prolonged restoration of appetite
  • familiar foods
  • physical activity: recover cardiorespiratory and skeletal function
29
Q

when to start nutritional rehabilitation

A

1-2 weeks after initial stabilization

after resolution of edema

30
Q

3 derangements seen in re-feeding syndrome that can lead to sudden death

A

Potassium: intracellular
Phosphorus: intracellular
Magnesium

31
Q

Potassium in re-feeding syndrome

A
increased insulin secretion 
-->
intracellular glucose and K+
--> 
decreased serum K+
-->
altered nerve/ muscle fxn
32
Q

phosphorus in re-feeding syndrome

A
increased insulin secretion
-->
intracellular P
-->
Increased intracellular phosphorylated intermediates
-->
P trapped in intracellular space
33
Q

magnesium in re-feeding syndrome

A

increased metabolic rate
–> increased requirement

= cofactor for ATPase