Title: NFSC 470 Seminar MNT Review of Clinical Nutrition
1NFSC 470Seminar MNT Review of Clinical Nutrition
2What are some signs/symptoms of dysphagia? What
labs might be affected?
3If dysphagia doesnt resolve and you must
recommend a tube feeding, where would you
recommend it be placed and why?
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5What are your diet and lifestyle recommendations
for someone who has GERD?
6So for GERD
7What are the nutrition implications of chronic
gastritis? In other words, the absorption of
what vitamin might be affected, and this would
lead to what condition?
8What are the most common causes of gastric
ulcers? What recommendations would you give to
your patients with ulcers?
9The post-gastrectomy diet is designed to decrease
risk for dumping syndrome. What are the primary
tenets of this diet?
10What are the signs of fat malabsorption? What
are the nutritional implications? What are your
dietary recommendations for someone with fat
malabsorption, in general??
11What are your recommendations for someone with
lactose intolerance?
12What is IBD? Name two forms.
13What are the nutritional recommendations for IBD?
14What are the dietary recommendations for
diverticulosis? Diverticulitis?
15Describe the nutrition recommendations for
someone with a colostomy or ileostomy.
16What are some causes of hepatic steatosis? What
are your nutrition recommendations?
17What are the biochemical indicators for hepatic
steatosis?
18Ascites is associated with what disease state?
What are the nutritional recommendations?
19Cirrhosis may cause steatorrhea. Why? Whats
the MNT?
20Would you expect a change in lab values for
someone with cirrhosis?
21What are the hallmark lab indicators of acute
pancreatitis? Hallmark symptoms?
22Why would pancreatitis cause steatorrhea?
23Whats the MNT for acute pancreatitis?
24For someone with acute pancreatitis who requires
a tube feeding, where should it be placed and
why?
25Tell me what could cause elevated blood glucose
levels.
26Whats albumin and why do we look at it when
assessing nutritional status?
27What pair of lab values may indicate dehydration?
(Tell me which way theyd be off, either
elevated or depressed).
28What might cause low electrolyte values?
29What does it mean, in general, if someone has a
low Hgb and Hct?
30What does a high MCV mean, and what dietary
factors could cause it?
31What are the two labs that (in general) together
indicate kidney disease?
32In renal failure, how would you expect the
following labs to change? (Indicate up, down, or
n/c for no change)
- ___BUN ___creatinine
- ___uric acid ___K (potassium)
- ___ PO4 (Phosphorus)
- ___ Hgb/Hct __albumin
33What is Hgb A1c and what does it indicate?
34What are the LDL goals for people with diabetes,
and why?
35What does GFR indicate?
36What are the dietary restrictions associated with
kidney failure? (pre-dialysis)
37Which one of these changes once dialysis is
initiated?
38List the desirable or optimal values
- Total cholesterol (for people age 30)
____________ - LDL cholesterol __________
- HDL cholesterol __________
- TG (triglycerides) __________
- Blood pressure ______________
- Fasting blood glucose (range) ____________
- Serum albumin ___________
39What type of dietary fiber helps reduce serum
cholesterol? How does it do it? What are some
good food sources?
40What is the DASH diet? For whom is it
appropriate? What are the main tenets of this
diet?
41What are the main tenets for the TLC diet?
(Therapeutic Lifestyle Changes)
- Nutrient
- Saturated fat
- Polyunsaturated fat
- Monounsaturated fat
- Total fat
- Carbohydrate
- Fiber
- Protein
- Cholesterol
-
42Enteral Nutrition
- Indications
- Patient must have a functioning GI tract
- Malnourished patient expected to be unable to eat
gt - Normally nourished patient expected to be unable
to eat gt - (anorexia, comotose, head/neck surgery,
hypermetabolic, adaptive phase of SBS, upper GI
obstruction if TF can be placed beyond it)
43- Contraindications
- Intractable vomiting and/or diarrhea
- Intestinal obstruction, ileus, or bleed
- Early SBS
- Fistula
- Early short-bowel syndrome
- Pt. intolerance
- No enteral access/pt. refusal
- Pt. expected to eat within reasonable timeframe
- Aggressive therapy not warranted
44- Types of formulas
- Intact (Standard)
- Hydrolyzed (Elemental)
- Modular
- Kcals
- Standard
- Concentrated
- Osmolality
45- Routes of Administration
- NG
- ND
- NJ
- PEG
- PEJ
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47Enteral Calculations
- Volume
- rate (ml/hr) x 24 hours ml total volume/day
- Kcals
- volume x kcal/ml kcals
- Protein
- g_ x volume (L) g prot/day
- L
- Water
- volume x free water (plus flushes) ml/day
- (Review Homework Problems)
48Parenteral Nutrition
- TPN Total Parenteral Nutrition
- Provision of nutrients intravenously
- Central
- Peripheral (PPN)
- For patients who are already malnourished or have
the potential for developing malnutrition and who
are not candidates for enteral nutrition
49- Indications for TPN
- NPO for extended period (gt10 days)
- Enteral nutrition support projected to be
inadequate for gt14 days - Extensive small bowel resections
- Radiation enteritis
- Intractable diarrhea/vomiting
- GI tract obstruction
- Severe acute pancreatitis
- Fistula
50- B. Contraindications
- 1. Patients for whom EN would meet
requirements - 2. Terminally ill patients.
51Routes for Parenteral NutritionCentral Venous
Access
52Routes for Parenteral NutritionCentral Venous
Access
- PICC Line
- Peripherally inserted central catheter
- Easier to insert than central line
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54Peripheral Parenteral Nutrition (PPN)
- Utilization of peripheral veins for the
administration of nutrients - Indications for use
- Short term PN
- No access to central vein
- Malnourished pts with frequent NPO for
procedures/tests
55- Contraindications
- Weak peripheral veins
- Fluid restrictions (i.e. kidney disease,
congestive heart failure, etc.) - Limitations
- Peripheral site more prone to inflammation/infecti
on - Fewer kcals administered
- Remember PPN solution needs to have
- lt10 dextrose to avoid phlebitis
- lipids q day to protect the vein
56Review of PN Solutions and Calculations
57- Intravenous Solutions
- Abbreviations
- D dextrose
- W water
- NS normal saline (0.9 sodium chloride
solution) - D5W
- D10W
- D50W
- D70W
58- Calculations
- Dextrose
- AA
- Lipid
- 10 lipid provides
- 20 lipid provides
- Lipid can be infused separately or with dextrose
and amino acid (admixture)
59- TPN Orders Several ways they can be written.
Examples - Per liter
- Example 500 ml 70 dextrose, 500 ml 15 AA _at_ 50
ml per hour, plus 250 ml 20 lipid/d - Final concentration
- Example 20 dextrose, 6 AA at 85 ml/hr plus
- 500 ml 10 lipid/d
- Per Day
- 960ml 8.5 Aas, 960ml D50W at 80ml/hr, plus
250 ml 20 lipids q day -
60- Example1 Figure out total kcalories and protein
grams per day from this per liter order - 500 ml 8.5 AA/L
- 500 ml D50W/L
- to be run_at_75ml/hr.
- plus 500ml 10 lipid
1 liter admixture
In this example, lipids are hung separately
61- Protein Grams (per 500 mL)
-
- Kcalories (per L)
-
62 63- Example 2
- Calculate total kcals and protein grams provided
in this per-day formula -
- 960ml 8.5 AAs
- 960ml D50W
- to run _at_ 80ml/hr (X 24h 1920ml)
- plus 250 ml 20 lipids q day
64 65TPN Administration
- Rate
- Start slowly, especially w/dextrose. Allows
blood to adapt to increased glucose/osmolality - Infusion pump is used to ensure proper rate.
- Example Start at 40ml/hr x 24hr. Then progress
to 80ml/hr x 24h (equivalent to increasing TPN by
1 liter per day), etc. until goal rate has been
reached or patient intolerance is noted.
66- a. If rate is increased too quickly,
hyperglycemia may result - b. Monitor tolerance electrolytes, blood
glucose, triglycerides, ammonia, etc. - 4. Introduce lipids gradually to avoid adverse
reactions (fever, chills, backache, chest pain,
allergic reactions, palpitations, rapid
breathing, wheezing, cyanosis, nausea, and
unpleasant taste in the mouth) - 5. When pt. is taken off TPN, rate must be
tapered off gradually to prevent hypoglycemia. - 6. (? TPN by ½ X 2 hrs, then DC usually
sufficient to prevent hypoglycemia) - 7. PPN doesnt need to be tapered off (uses more
dilute solution w/less dextrose)
67- Cyclic Infusion
- TPN infused at a constant rate for only lt24
hours/day (e.g. 12-14hr overnight) - Allows more freedom/normal daytime activity
- Can be used to reverse fatty liver resulting from
continuous infusion - (Chronically high insulin levels may inhibit fat
mobilization ? fatty liver) - Fewer kcals may be necessary to maintain N
balance (body fat better mobilized for energy) - Requires higher infusion rate not all patients
can tolerate it.
68Potential TPN Complications
- Catheter or Care-Related Complications
- Fluid in the chest (hydrothorax)
- Air or gas in the chest (pneumothorax)
- Blood in the chest (hemothorax)
- Sepsis
- Blood clot (thrombosis)
- Infusion pump malfunctions
- Myocardial or arterial puncture
69- B. Metabolic or Nutrition-related Complications
- Hyperglycemia/Hypoglycemia
- Dehydration/Fluid overload
- Electrolyte imbalances
- Hyperammonemia
- Acid-base imbalance
- Fatty liver
- Bone demineralization
70Transitional Feedings -- moving from parenteral
to enteral nutrition
- Begin oral diet while tapering off TPN
-
-
71- B. Tube feeding while tapering off TPN
- Rate of TF gradually increases as TPN rate
decreases - Remember that long term TPN without enteral
nutrients ? atrophy of intestinal villi - C. Discontinue TPN when oral/enteral intake
provides - Consider possible apprehension to begin oral
intake - Poor appetite possible at first
- Team members should provide support and
reassurance