Title: Estimating nutritional requirements – what is the evidence?
1Controversies in the determination of energy
requirements
Dr. Elizabeth Weekes Department of Nutrition
Dietetics Guys St. Thomas Hospitals NHS
Foundation Trust London
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3Controversies
- Is measured energy expenditure (MEE) always the
most accurate way to determine energy
requirements? - Is it valid to extrapolate results from a study
population to an individual patient? - What should we do in clinical practice?
- If I feed my patient to estimated energy
requirements will he/she do better than if I
dont?
4Total Energy Expenditure
DIT
Activity
BMR
5Methods of estimating energy expenditure
- Indirect calorimetry
- Short-term measurements (up to 24 hours)
- Hood/ventilator modes
- Doubly-labelled water technique
- Long-term measurements (several weeks)
- Cost and technical considerations
- Measures Total Energy Expenditure
- Prediction equations fudge factors
6Prediction equations
- May over or under-estimate compared with measured
energy expenditure (MEE) - Inadequately validated
- Poor predictive value for individuals
- Open to misinterpretation
- (Cortes Nelson, 1989 Malone, 2002 Reeves
Capra, 2003)
7Basal metabolic rate
- Minimal intra-individual variation 3
- Inter-individual variation 10 depending on-
- proportions of body cell mass and metabolically
active organs and tissues - thyroid function
- circadian rythms
8Conditions essential for measuring BMR
- Post-absorptive (12 hour fast)
- Lying still at physical and mental rest
- Thermo-neutral environment (27 29oC)
- No tea/coffee/nicotine in previous 12 hours
- No heavy physical activity previous day
- Gases must be calibrated
- Establish steady-state ( 30 minutes)
- If any of the above conditions are not met
- Resting Energy Expenditure (REE)
9Measured Energy Expenditure (MEE)
- Measured in clinical setting by indirect
calorimetry - (rarely available in UK hospitals)
- Recommended in certain conditions e.g. liver
disease, obesity, critical illness (ASPEN, 2002) - Needs to be measured correctly in order to
provide valid and reliable data
10MEE in healthy subjects
Activity
DIT
Doubly-labelled water
BMR
Indirect calorimetry
11MEE in clinical studies
- Calibration
- How long and how often to measure
- Achieving a steady-state
- Lying in bed, awake and aware
- No social or physical interactions
- Avoid haemodialysis and filtration
- Patient/apparatus interface
- Hood/canopy
- Ventilated patients
12MEE in disease
Activity
DIT
BMR Stress
Indirect calorimetry
13Controversies
- Is measured energy expenditure (MEE) always the
most accurate way to determine energy
requirements? - Is it valid to extrapolate results from a study
population to an individual patient? - What should we do in clinical practice?
- If I feed my patient to estimated energy
requirements will he/she do better than if I
dont?
14Reviewing the literature
- Patient demography
- Sample size
- Diagnosis
- Severity of illness/injury and metabolic status
- Nutritional status
- Nutritional intake
- Temperature (room and patient)
- Therapeutic interventions e.g. ventilation, drugs
- Methodology
15Energy requirements in COPD
- Schols et al. (1996)
- Age 61 ( 6) years BMI 23.5 ( 4.2) kg/m2
- REE lt 105 HB in 14 patients
- REE gt 120 HB in 16 patients (weight-losing, ?
FFM, ? CRP and ? acute phase proteins) - 30 stable COPD patients admitted to
rehabilitation unit - Vermeeren et al., (1997)
- Age 63 ( 8) years BMI 23.0 ( 3.2) kg/m2
- REE 123 ( 11) HB on admission
- REE 113 ( 14) HB on discharge
- (REE gt 110 HB in 10 patients at discharge)
- 23 acute COPD patients admitted to hospital
16Controversies
- Is measured energy expenditure (MEE) always the
most accurate way to determine energy
requirements? - Is it valid to extrapolate results from a study
population to an individual patient? - What should we do in clinical practice?
- If I feed my patient to estimated energy
requirements will he/she do better than if I
dont?
17Estimating requirements in clinical practice (I)
- Assess metabolic state
- Is my patient metabolically stressed, recovering
or anabolic - Is there a risk of re-feeding syndrome?
- Establish physical activity level
- Is the patient sedated, bed-bound, mobile on
ward, receiving physiotherapy, at home - Determine goals of treatment
- e.g. minimise losses, weight maintenance or
weight change
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19Metabolic response to injury
20Assessing metabolic stress
- Stressed
- ? temperature
- ? urea
- ? white cell count
- ? C-reactive protein
- ? albumin
- ? insulin resistance
- Oedema
- N.B. Stress response may be blunted in
immuno- compromised and elderly patients
21Stress factors
- Timing of measurements
- Over (hyperalimentation) vs. under-feeding
- Changes in therapeutic interventions
- e.g. improved wound care, anti-pyretics,
sedation, control of ambient room temperature - ? Err towards lower end of the range and monitor
22Estimating requirements in clinical practice (I)
- Assess metabolic state
- Is my patient metabolically stressed, recovering
or anabolic - Is there a risk of re-feeding syndrome?
- Establish physical activity level
- Is the patient sedated, bed-bound, mobile on
ward, receiving physiotherapy, at home - Determine goals of treatment
- e.g. minimise losses, weight maintenance or
weight change
23Physical activity
- Assumes normal neuro-muscular function
- ?Review literature for patients with abnormal
function - e.g. brain injury, Parkinsons disease, cerebral
palsy, motor neurone disease and Huntingtons
chorea - Prolonged and active physiotherapy
- Increased effort of moving injured/painful limbs
- Mechanical inefficiency e.g. COPD (Baarends et
al., 1997)
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25Physical activity
- Free living individuals have higher energy
expenditure due to physical activity - Nursing home and house-bound patients may have
similar activity levels to hospitalised patients - For active patients in the community a PAL should
be added
26Estimating requirements in clinical practice (I)
- Assess metabolic state
- Is my patient metabolically stressed, recovering
or anabolic - Is there a risk of re-feeding syndrome?
- Establish physical activity level
- Is the patient sedated, bed-bound, mobile on
ward, receiving physiotherapy, at home - Determine goals of treatment
- Should I aim to minimise losses, maintain weight
or achieve weight change (loss or gain)
27Estimating requirements in clinical practice II
- Be aware of the literature on energy requirements
in your patient group (and any gaps in the
evidence) - Compare your patient with available literature
and either assign relevant stress factor OR
adjust for weight change - Monitor, review and amend requirements as
clinical condition, physical activity and
nutritional goals change
28If I feed my patient to estimated energy
requirements will he/she do better than if I
dont?
- Over-feeding is not good
- (Askanazi et al., 1980 Lowry Brenman, 1979
Kirkpatrick et al., 1981) - Is under-feeding always bad?
- Should we start everyone on 1500 kcal/day?
29Conclusions
- Estimated requirements are only a starting point
- Set realistic goals of treatment for each patient
- Monitor and amend as patients condition changes
- Review and critically appraise the literature
- Be aware of gaps in the evidence
- Understand the limitations of guidelines
- Check applicability to your patients
- Contribute to research and audit projects