Nutrition & Obesity Flashcards

1
Q

Primary v Secondary Malnutrition

A
  • Primary Malnutrition - dec intake
    • Poverty, famine, neglect
    • GI motility disorders, deglutition problems (poor dentition and stroke), cancer-induced anorexia, eating disorders, dementia/mental illness, alcoholism/drug abuse
  • Secondary Malnutrition - adequate diet but dec digestion, absorption or assimilation due to disease (normal intake); more common in US
    • Digestion Problems
    • Absorption Problems
    • Inc Metabolism / inc excretion (diarrhea)
    • Inc requirements - burns, chronic infection, trauma, etc
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2
Q

Nutrition Eval

A

Subjective - diet, allergies, supplements, appetite changes, barriers (bad dentures), GI symptoms, living situation (nursing facility, access to stores, etc)

  • Physical Exam - cachexia, edema, condition of teeth/mouth, temporal wasting, hair changes, hand muscle wasting, nail bed deformities, ascites, rashes, xanthomas
  • Labs (visceral proteins, Hb/hematocrit for anemia, BUN/nitrogen/creatinine)
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3
Q

Unstressed v Stressed Starvation

A
  • Unstressed Starvation - chronic primary malnutrition resulting in severe total caloric deficiency –marked loss of body fat and protein stores
  • Stressed Starvation - acquired, maladaptive state w/ primary protein deficiency - often in time of metabolic stress; can be acute or chronic –> rapid muscle wasting, edema, tissue breakdown into ulcers and infections
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4
Q

Visceral Proteins (at steady state)

A

Albumin (21 day half-life - lagging indicator)

Inc - dehydration
Dec - acute/chronic malnutrition, preg, fluid overload, severe liver disease, inflam/malignancy, nephrotic syndrome

Pre-albumin (transthyretin - half-life of 2/3 days so recent changes)

Inc -dehydration, renal fail
Dec - acute/chronic malnutrition, preg, fluid overload, severe liver disease, inflam/malignancy

Retinol Binding Protein

Inc - renal fail, alcoholism
Dec- acute/chronic malnutrition, chronic liver disease, zinc or Vit A def, hyperthyroid

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5
Q

Nitrogen Balance, BUN and Creatinine

A
  • Nitrogen Balance = (protein intake in grams/6.25) - (24 hr UUN + 4 grams N)
    • Normal is 0 to -2
      • 2 means anabolism and sufficient intake of protein
  • BUN - elevated w/ high catabolism (protein breakdown) or inc protein intake
  • Creatinine - if euvolemic and normal kidneys this can reflect dec muscle mass if low
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6
Q

Undernutrition Risk Categories (4)

A
  • Low <90% IBW
  • Mod <85% IBW
  • High <70% IBW
  • Incompatible w/ life <60% IBW

**Est IBW for women = 100 + 5(#inches above 5ft)
for men = 110 +5(#inches above 5ft)

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7
Q

6 Weight Categories

A
  • Underweight - BMI <18.5
    - Normal - BMI 18.5-24.9
    - Overweight - BMI 25-29.9
    - Obese Class I - BMI 30-34.9
    - Obese Class II - BMI 35-39.9
    - Obese Class III - BMI 40+
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8
Q

3 Stages of Unstressed Starvation

A
  • < 24 hr - liver glycogen stores depleted to maintain blood glucose, dec insulin/inc glucagon; AA release from muscle for use in gluconeogenesis and FA release for energy
  • Days - 3 wks - no more liver glycogen so dep on gluconeogenesis; inc rate of protein breakdown but fat provides most energy (FA metabolism –> ketone bodies)
    • Brain can use ketones or glucose
  • > 3wks - inc ketone body prod (higher levels of ketones in blood so now make it into brain); less need for gluconeogenesis so dec protein breakdown; slower metabolism, salt/water retention
    • Inc TSH, renin, aldosterone, ADH, growth hormone, cortisol
    • Dec glucagon, insulin, LH, prolactin, IGF-1
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9
Q

How do organs adapt to unstressed starvation chronically? (7)

A
  • Dec physical activity
  • Hypothermia
  • Dec CO, HR, BP
  • Dec urine output and GFR
  • Dec motility, brush border enzyme levels and villus height in GI
  • Impaired immune function
  • Dec lean body mass, dec fat, edema and inc fatty liver
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10
Q

Body Changes in Stressed Starvation (6)

A
  • particular dec in protein stores and inc extracellular water (edema)
  • Hypermetabolism
  • Inc muscle breakdown for AA - skeletal and visceral (for gluconeogenesis, repair, inflammation)
  • Insulin resistance and hyperglycemia
  • Inc catecholamines, glucagon, cortisol, TNF-alpha, IL-1, IL-6
  • Inc extracellular water (edema)
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11
Q

Malnutrition Tx

A
  • Refeeding Syndrome - dramatic response to reintroducing nutrition (anabolism –> rapid shift of electrolytes from outside cell –> inside cell –> hypokalemia, hypomagnesium, hypophosphatemia)
  • Need additional vitamins; vitamin deficiencies become unmasked (esp thiamine)
  • Can lead to… cardiac arrhythmia, neuro dysfunction or even death
  • Small amounts of fats, proteins and carbs w/ K+, Mg+ and phos supplements + vitamins
  • Avoid huge amounts of volume even if dehydrated b/c risk CHF
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12
Q

2 Routes of Nutritional Delivery

A
  • Enteral - always prefer oral; if sedated/dysphagia/aspiration then use feeding tube right to gut (nasogastric, nasojejunal, oro-gastric if sedated)
  • TPN (total parenteral nutrition) -if have to bypass gut then use IV nutrition
    • EXPENSIVE and greater infection risk
    • PPN (peripheral) - lower Osm
    • TPN (central line) - higher Osm
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13
Q

Anorexia (dx, complications, tx)

A
  • Dx - restricted calorie intake + intense fear of wt gain despite being under wt (w/ distorted image or undue influence of body weight on self worth)
    • Restrictive type - no binging or purging but severely restrict intake
    • Binge/purging type - w/o prolonged fasting b/n episodes of binging or purging
  • Complications = heme and electrolyte abnormalities –> CHF, arrhythmias, hypokalemia, metabolic acidosis, anemia AND GI - constipation, gastritis, esophageal erosions, stomach rupture AND osteoporosis
  • Tx - CBT most effective; careful of refeeding syndrome; may use SSRIs in combo w/ CBT (fluoxetine - Prozac)
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14
Q

Cachexia

A
  • invol wt loss, lean body mass wasting, weakness, anorexia
  • Common in cancer, tb, HIV, autoimmune disorders, CHF, liver failure, etc
  • TNF-alpha, interferon-gamma, IL-1 and IL-6 (+ secondary malabsorption)
  • Tx -
    • Nutritional support (often use gels or nutrient dense liquids)
      • Appetite stimulants - prednisone, cannabinoids
      • SSRIs/SNRIs
      • Anti-emetics
      • Muscle growth stimulation - anabolic hormones (testosterone) or GH
      • Block cytokine production - melatonin, thalidomide
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15
Q

6 Stimulatory Substances that Convey Hunger

A
  • neuropeptide Y
  • opioids
  • Ghrelin (released by stomach - meal initiation)
  • melanin conc hormone
  • growth hormone releasing hormone
  • endocannabinoids
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16
Q

8 Inhibitory Substances that Convey Satiety

A
  • leptin (long-term)
  • Peptide YY (L cells of ileum post-meal - more short term)
  • cholecystokinin
  • serotonin
  • enterostatin
  • corticotropin releasing hormone
  • Alpha MSJ
  • glucagon like peptide 1
17
Q

Metabolic Syndrome (criteria and complications)

A

CRITERIA (3/5)

  • 1- Inc waist circumference (>35 inches in women; >40 inches in men)
  • 2- Inc triglycerides >150 mg/dL
  • 3- Dec HDL
  • 4- Inc fasting blood glucose
  • 5- Inc BP
  • Inc BMI –> inc insulin secretion (then insulin resistance) –> inc hepatic VLDL triglyceride synthesis and secretion (dyslipidemia)
  • Obesity –> inc symp activity –> renal sodium reabsorption –> HTN
  • Can lead to… DM, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, cholelithiasis (inc cholesterol production in risk of gallstones), severe acute pancreatitis (worse course), HTN, MI and stroke risk, inc cancer risk (chronic inflammation, extra insulin, extra estrogen), chronic venous insufficiency/varicose veins
18
Q

3 Devices for Obesity

A

1- Gastric balloons - induce distention chronically so feel full

- Orbera - pill that inflates
- ReShape - endoscopic placement and removal

2- Vagal nerve stim - surgical implant that can be adjusted like a pacemaker and blocks vagal signaling

3- Gastric emptying - PEG tube that drains stomach after meals into external flush/suction device

19
Q

3 Surgeries for Obesity

A

1- Adjustable lap-band - around GE junction to restrict food intake by creating smaller stomach pouch; reversible and adjustable thru port but high rate later complications

2- Sleeve Gastrectomy - longitudinal gastric resection so less compliant stomach; laproscopic but irreversible and may inc GERD

3- Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass - create small gastric pouch then distal loop of jejunum is cut and anastomosed to pouch to receive food

    - Remainder that is bypassed is left to drain secretions and enzymes and anastomosed to distal jejunum to get enzymes to food there
    - Best results and prevents reflux but irreversible, anastomoses can lead to ulcers and can lead to thiamine, iron and B12 def, motility problems
20
Q

10 Obesity Drugs

A
  • Amphetamine-like - suppress appetite but pulled for cardio sympathomimetic effects
  • Sympathomimetics - suppress appetite and inc metabolism
    • Side effects - dry mouth, dry skin, constipation, inc BP, insomnia
    • Ex) phentermine, diethylproprion, benzphetamine, phendimetrazine AND caffeine & ephedrine
  • Serotonin Agonist - no longer on market b/c caused heart valve disorder & pulm HTN
    • Ex) fenfluramine (“Phen-fen”)
  • Lorcaserin - selectively binds 5-HT2C receptors to inc satiety and dec hunger
  • Buproprion - dopamine and NE reuptake inhibitor; appetite suppression
  • Phentermine - topiramate (b/c pts on topiramate for epilepsy lost wt)
    - Side effects = depression, anxiety, suicidal ideation, glaucoma
  • Buproprion - naltrexone - add opiate receptor antagonist to help w/ impulse control
  • Cannabinoid receptor blockers -pulled from market b/c high depression and suicide rates
  • Neuroendocrine/Hormones - Liraglutide; injectable GLP-1 receptor agonist; only modest effects
  • Orlistat - gastric and pancreatic lipase inhibitor taken w/ meals to dec digestion of fat (fatty stools, fecal incontinence, block vit K absorption)