Malnutrition Flashcards

1
Q

Definition of malnutrition?

A

A state of nutrition in which a deficiency, excess or imbalance of energy, protein and other nutrients causes measurable adverse effects on tissue/body form/function/clinical outcome

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2
Q

Causes of malnutrition?

A

Decreased intake

Increased nutritional requirements

Impaired absorption and/or digestion

Increased nutrient losses/utilisation

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3
Q

Describe the relation between aspects of malnutrition and its impact

A

Chronic status, e.g: anorexia, asthenia, depression, dysphagia, etc lead to poor food intake

Malnutrition results and this can cause GI dysfunction, e.g: increased infection rate, decreased wound healing and physical weakness

Acute events can also influence the impact of malnutrition

This all leads to hypermetabolism, inflammatory responses and insulin resistance, creating stress-related catabolism than perpetuates GI dysfunction

Eventually, GI dysfunction leads to an increase in the length of stay in hospital

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4
Q

Psychosocial causes of malnutrition?

A

Inappropriate food provision
Lack of assistance
Poor eating environment
Lack of cooking skills/facilities

etc

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5
Q

Effects of starvation on metabolic rate, nitrogen levels, hormones and water and sodium?

A

Decreased metabolic rate and slow loss, almost all of which is from fat stores

There are decreased nitrogen losses; there are early small increases in catecholamines, cortisol, GH and then a slow fall. Insulin is decreased

With water and Na+, there is an initial loss and then late retention

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6
Q

Effects of injury on metabolic rate, nitrogen levels, hormones and water and sodium?

A

Inreased metabolic rate and a rapid loss from fat stores and from some protein stores

There is an increase in nitrogen losses; there are increases in catecholamines, cortisol, GH. Insulin is increased but there is relative insulin deficiency

There is water and Na+ retention

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7
Q

Adverse effects of malnutrition?

A
Impaired immune responses and wound healing
Reduced muscle strength and fatigue 
Inactivity and pressure sores
Water and electrolyte disturbances
Impaired thermoregulation
Menstrual irregularities
Impaired psycho-social function
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8
Q

What different GI diseases cause weight loss?

A
Intra-abdominal infection
Impaired GI motility
Acute liver disease
Coeliac disease
Crohn's disease
Colorectal cancer
Gastric cancer
Oesophageal cancer
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9
Q

What is MUST?

A

Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool has 5 MUST steps:
Step 1 - measure height and weight to get a BMI
Step 2 - note % unplanned weight loss and score using tables provided
Step 3 - establish acute disease effect and score
Step 4 - add score from steps 1-3 to obtain an overall risk of malnutrition
Step 5 - use management guidelines to develop care plan

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10
Q

Methods of nutritional assessment?

A
Anthropometry
Biochemistry
Clinical causes
Diagnosis
Environment
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11
Q

Examples of anthropometry?

A

Mid-arm muscle circumference
Triceps
Grip strength

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12
Q

Examples of measurements taken in biochemical tests?

A

Albumin - could indicate malnutrition due to reduced synthesis when supply of AA is limited but this is affected by many other factors; non-specific marker of illness

Transferrin - synthesis reduced in protein restriction

Transthyretin (pre-albumin) - reflects recent dietary intake rather than overall nutritional status, so it is most useful in monitoring response to nutritional support

Retinol binding protein - reflects recent dietary intake rather than overall nutritional status

Urinary creatinine - if renal function is normal, excretion rate will reflect muscle mass; it requires 24 hrs urine collection

IGF1 - reduced in acute/chronic malnutrition and increases with repletion; serial measurements to monitor response are more useful than single measurements to assess status

Micronutrients - poor correlation between plasma values and intracellular conc, esp. during illness, so measurement of related coenzymes is more useful

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13
Q

What other factors affect the biochemical tests?

A

Albumin - especially APR (abdominoperineal resection)

Transferrin - affected by APR, iron deficiency and liver disease

Transthyretin - increased in uraemia and dehydration; decreased by APR and fasting

Retinol binding protein - more affected by energy than protein restriction. Levels are increased by and a GFR increase and alcoholism; decreased by chronic liver disorders and Vit A and zinc deficiency

IGF1 - levels reduced in liver disease and renal failure and less affected by APR

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14
Q

Which biochemicals are lower in the high risk group?

A

Vit A, C, D, E

Albumin and zinc

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15
Q

What does nutritional support involve?

A

Food fortification & dietary counselling first

Oral nutrition support – e.g. additional snacks and/or sip feeds

Enteral tube feeding – the delivery of a nutritionally complete feed directly into the gut via a tube

Parenteral nutrition – the delivery of iv nutrition

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16
Q

Who needs nutritional support?

A

BMI 10% within the last 3–6 months

BMI 5% within the last 3–6 months

Have eaten or are likely to eat little or nothing for more than 5 days or longer

Poor absorptive capacity and/or high nutrient losses and/or increased nutritional needs from causes such as catabolism

17
Q

How is enteral tube feeding allowed?

A
Nasogastric (NG)
Nasojejunal (NJ)
Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy PEG
Percutaneous jejunostomy
Surgical jejunostomy
18
Q

Indications for enteral tube feeding?

A

Inadequate or unsafe oral intake, and a functional, accessible gastrointestinal tract

‘if the gut works, use it’:
Unconscious patients
Neuromuscular swallowing disorder
Upper GI obstruction
GI dysfunction
Increased nutritional requirements
19
Q

Contra-indications for enteral tube feeding?

A
Lower gastrointestinal obstruction
Prolonged intestinal ileus
Severe diarrhoea or vomiting
High enterocutaneous fistula
Intestinal ischaemia
20
Q

What is parenteral nutrition?

A

The administration of nutrient solutions via a central or peripheral vein; it is expensive, there are many potential complications and there may be psycho-social disturbances

21
Q

Indications for parenteral nutrition?

A

People who are malnourished or at risk of malnutrition and meet either of the following criteria:

Inadequate or unsafe oral and/or enteral nutritional intake
A non-functional, inaccessible or perforated (leaking) GI tract, e.g: IBD with severe malabsorption, radiation enteritis, short bowel syndrome, motility disorders

22
Q

What is refeeding syndrome?

A

Potentially fatal shifts in fluids and electrolytes and disturbances in organ function and metabolic regulation that may result from rapid initiation of re feeding after a period of under nutrition

Less likely to occur with oral feeding but excessive feeding in PN/EN can cause this

23
Q

Pathway leading to refeeding syndrome, starting from malnutrition?

A

Malnutrition alters glycogenolysis, gluconeogenesis and protein catabolism

Protein, fat, mineral, electrolyte and Vit depletion; there is salt and water intolerance

Refeeding (switch to anabolism)

Fluid, salt, nutrient changes

Insulin secretion increases protein and glycogen synthesis; this can cause hypokalaemia / magnesaemia / phosphataemia, thiamine deficiency and salt and water retiontion (oedema)

Leads to refeeding syndrome

24
Q

Metabolic features of refeeding syndrome?

A
Hypokalaemia
Hypophosphataemia
Hypomagnesaemia
Altered glucose metabolism
Fluid overload
25
Q

Physiological features of refeeding syndrome?

A
Arrhythmias
Altered level of consciousness
Seizure
Respiratory failure
Cardiovascular collapse
Death
26
Q

How to prevent refeeding syndrome in moderate risk patients?

A

Introduce nutrition support at a maximum of 50% of requirements for first 48 hours

Monitor clinical and biochemical parameters

Increase nutrition support to meet full requirements if monitoring reveals no problems

27
Q

How to prevent refeeding syndrome in high risk patients?

A

Check PO4, Mg2+, K+ and Ca2+

Provide immediately before and during first 10 days of feeding: thiamin, vitamin B compound and a multi-vitamin and mineral supplement

Start feeding at 5-10 kcal/kg/day; slowly increase feeding over 4-7 days

Rehydrate carefully and supplement/correct levels of
PO4, Mg2+, K+ and Ca2+

Monitor PO4, Mg2+, K+ and Ca2+ for first 2 weeks and
amend supplementation as appropriate