Nutrition Flashcards

1
Q

What are the eat well guidelines?

A
  • 5 portions of fruit and vegetables daily
  • Base meals on potatoes, bread, rice, pasta or other starchy carbohydrates
  • Have some dairy or dairy alternatives
  • Choose lower fat and lower sugar options
  • Eat some beans, pulses, fish, eggs, meat and other proteins
  • Choose unsaturated oils and spreads
  • Drink 6-8 cups/glasses of fluid a day
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2
Q

What factors influence dietary choices?

A

age, illness, social circumstances, culture, advertising/marketing, knowledge, skills

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3
Q

Why is adequate nutrition important in hospital?

A

To improve chances of recovery

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4
Q

What are the 2 main strategies used when patients cannot feed themselves?

A

Enteral feeding: Delivery of a nutritious fluid past the upper GI tract and into the stomach/small intestine.

Pareneteral feeding: Bypassing the GI tract altogether via delivery of nutrients into the blood.

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5
Q

Compare the route of delivery for enteral and parenteral nutrition

A

enteral - A tube is placed into GI tract to deliver liquid food.

parenteral - administered through blood via venous catheter

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6
Q

What kind of patient is enteral and parenteral used for?

A

enteral - upper GI problem, trauma, dysphagia so cannot chew

parenteral - dysfunction of GI tract so cannot absorb or excrete

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7
Q

Complications of enteral and parenteral

A

enteral - nausea, vomiting aspiration

parenteral - blood clots, infection, liver failure

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8
Q

Which one of enteral and parenteral require special training?

A

parenteral

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9
Q

What is the effect of enteral and parenteral on the GI tract?

A

enteral - maintains GI structure

parenteral - atrophy of GI if underuse

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10
Q

Compare costs of enteral and parenteral

A

enteral - cheaper

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11
Q

What is short bowel sydrome?

A

Significant removal of the bowel which leaves the patient with less than 100 cm of functional intestinal tract. This is usually necessary because of problems such as Crohn’s disease, cancer, ischaemia, ulcerative colitis, irradiation.

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12
Q

Symptoms of short bowel syndrome?

A

malnutrition, dehydration, malabsorption

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13
Q

Consequences of short bowel syndrome?

A
  • Reduction in absorptive surface area
  • Loss of small intestine tissue interrupts the usually efficient control of gut function via hormones and the enteric nervous system
  • Loss of large intestine tissue is associated with increased risk of infection
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14
Q

Management of short bowel syndrome (aims)

A
  • To provide adequate nutrition for patients
  • To ensure adequate water and electrolytes to maintain homeostasis
  • Correction and prevention of acid base imbalance
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15
Q

How can the reliance on parenteral nutrition be reduced surgically?

A

Anastamosis of the small intestine to the colon

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16
Q

What affects the metabolism of alcohol?

A

diet, gender, body-habitus, racial and genetic influences

17
Q

What are the physical effects of alcohol?

A

CNS – Wernickes encephalopathy, Cerebral atrophy, Cerebellar syndrome, Optic Atrophy, Peripheral neuropathy

CVS – Hypertension, Alcoholic cardiomyopathy, Stroke

GIT – Oesophagitis, Gastritis, Oesophageal and Gastric cancer, Pancreatitis, Pancreatic cancer, Alcoholic Hepatitis, Cirrhosis, Liver Cancer

GUT – Glomerulonephritis, Renal failure

Endocrine & Reproduction – Pseudocushings, Impotence, Subfertility, Breast Cancer, Fetal Alcohol Syndrome