Title: Nutrition Support
1Nutrition Support
2Selecting a method
- If the gut works, use it
- When a person is unable to ingest enough food to
meet their nutritional needs - nutrition support is needed
- could be enteral if the gut works
- could be parenteral if the gut doesnt work
3Complete the following statement. If the gut
works, ________.
- Forget it
- Sell it
- Use it
- Buy it
- Select an alternate form of feeding the patient
other than the GI tract
4Enteral Nutrition
- By way of the GI tract
- Could be
- Oral Supplements
- Tube Feedings
- Nasogastric
- Nasoduodenal or nasojejunal
- Enterostomies
- Gastrostomies Percutaneous Endoscopic Gast.(PEG)
- Jejunostomies Multiple Lumen tubes
5Selecting an Oral Supplement
- 1. Degree of inability to meet needs
- 2. Presence or absence of dysphagia
- 3. Taste preference or sensitivity
- 4. Availability of labor and resources for
preparation - 5. Tolerance to lactose or other components
- 6. Tolerance of osmotic load
6Supplement Components
- Kcals 250 kcal/ 240 ml portion is the norm
- Fat
- Usually Long Chain Triglycerides
- Could be MCT if pt doesnt tolerate fats
- Protein
- 8 to 14 grams of intact protein
- CHO
- Form varies Simple adds sweetness and osmotic
load
7Tube Feedings Route of Access
- Several Factors
- 1. Length of time required
- Short term usually through nasopharynx
- Longer term through enterostomal routes
- 2. Risk of aspiration
- 3. Degree of digestion available
- 4. If there is a planned surgical intervention
8Nasogastric Route
- Nasogastric Tube simplest access
- Pt requires functional GI tract and normal gag
reflex - French .33 mm
- Can be large bore tube (French 12)
- Used for food, medications and gastric suctioning
or - Small bore, pliable tube (5 French)
- Greater comfort, but more easily clogged
9Nasoduodenal or Nasojejunal
- Tube threads through stomach to duodenum or
jejunum - Migration from stomach to duodenum via
peristaltic waves may take a few hours to days - Radiologic verification is required
- Small bowel feedings require careful selection of
enteral formula
10If you had a 12 French tube, what would the
diameter be?
- 3.96 m
- 3.96 cm
- 3.96 mm
- 39.6 mm
- .33 mm
11Enterostomies
- Surgical Gastrostomy
- Catheter is placed through the abdominal wall
into the stomach - A balloon is inflated to hold the catheter in
place in stomach - Requires good gastric functioning
- Can be associated with skin erosion, leakage of
gastric contents leading to peritonitis
12Surgical Jejunostomy
- Needle jejunostomy(temporary)
- Catheter jejunostomy(more permanent)
- both reduce risk of pulmonary aspiration
- small lumen size of tube difficult to maintain so
not often performed
13If you had a jejunostomy in place which of the
following formulas would you not use?
- Intact proteins as protein source
- Glucose as CHO source
- Free fatty acids as Fat source
- Pepperoni pizza
- 1 and 4
14Fluid requirements
- 1ml of water per kcal
- 35 ml/kg usual body weight
- Formulas contain 80 to 85 water
- may need to add water as an additional flush
15Osmolality
- Intact formulas fall between 300 to 500 mOsmol/kg
, approx the same as body fluids - No real concerns with fluid shifts
- Hydrolyzed formulas are often higher
- up to 900 mOsmol/kg
- contributes to extra fluid and electrolyte loss
- diarrhea
- Proper administration is key
16Administration of Enterals
- Continuous drip
- Intermittent drip
- Bolus feeding
17Continuous Drip
- Estimated total kcal needs are made
- Rate per hour determined based on the kcal
content of formula - 2000 kcals needed per day
- Formula has 1kcal/cc
- 2000kcal/1kcal/cc 2000 ccs needed
- 2000cc/24 hrs83ccs/hr is set as the goal volume
18Administration of Continuous Drip
- Caution when initiating tube feeding
- If the gut has not been used lately
- If the formula is hyperosmolar
- Feedings are typically started at 30 to 50
ccs/hr - Then advanced 25 to 30 ccs/hr every 8 to 12
hours until the target rate is obtained - Feedings of 300 to 500 mOsmol/kg can be started
at full strength hyper start slowly
19If a pt needs 2200 kcal per day and you are
administering a formula with 1.5 kcal/cc, how
many ccs would you need per day.
- 1800
- 1667
- 1467
- 2200
- None of the above
20For the pt on the previous slide, what would be
the goal hourly rate of enteral feeding?
- 100 cc/hr
- 88 cc/hr
- 61 cc/hr
- 42 cc/hr
- 25 cc/hr
21Admin of Tube Feeding
- If intolerance decrease to previous increment
and advance as tolerated - Dont hang a bag for days
- Food born illness
- Bag should be changed daily
- Dont add new formula on top of old formula
22Administration of Tube Feedings
- If fed into stomach, stomach contents checked
every 4 to 8 hours - if residual volume exceeds 100 ml, stomach isnt
emptying quickly and volume admin should be
reduced - Risk of pulmonary aspiration
23Intermittent or Bolus Feedings
- Quality of Life A more normal lifestyle with
intermittent feedings - Frees pt to be mobile
- Figuring intermittent or bolus feedings similar
to continuous - Total Kcals determined
- Divided by number of hours feeding
- General 4 to 6 feedings _at_ 20 to 60 min
24Administration of Bolus or Intermittent Feeding
- Residuals checked more frequently every 2 to 4
hours - Few pts can tolerate more than 450 ml per feeding
- Pt needs to be monitored for several potential
problems
25Monitoring Tube Fed Pt
- Weight 3 x wk
- Signs of Edema daily
- Signs of dehydration daily
- Fluid In/Out daily
- Cal, Pro, fat, CHO, vit min 2/wk
- N balance (24-hour UUN) weekly
- Gastric residuals (2 to 4 hrs)
26Monitoring Tube Fed pt
- Stool output and consistency (daily)
- Urine Glucose (every 6 hours until rate is
established then daily for Db pt) - Serum electrolytes, BUN, creatinine, blood count
(2-3 x wk) - Blood chemistry total protein, albumin,
pre-albumin, Ca, Mg, P, Liver Fxn weekly
27If you are initiating a tube feeding, which of
the following would you monitor?
- Gastric residuals
- Fluid in and out
- weight
- Blood values such as albumin and pre-albumin
- All of the above
28Tube Feeding Problem
- Pulmonary Pt with 1800 kcal need
- No renal problems or fluid restrictions
- gastrostomy in place
- Tube feeder with Pulmocare
- Pro casein CHO cornstarch and sucrose Fat
mixed triglycerides - 1.5 kcal/ml 55.2 kcal from Fat 28.1 kcal
from CHO62.5 g Pro/1000ccs 78.5 water - ? How much Pulmocare? how much fluidPro?
29Use Nutrition Care Manual
- http//nutritioncaremanual.org
30Pulmocare Problem
- Osmolality is 475 mOsmol/kg
- How would you administer this?
- What would you monitor to determine tolerance?
- What would you monitor to determine if needs were
met?
31Parenteral Nutrition
- If pt is unable to receive nutrients via the GI
tract - Then Parenteral Nutrition is Appropriate
32Parenteral Access
- Peripheral Access
- Arm (or leg)
- 900 mOsm/kg upper limit of acceptable
- Higher concentrations cause vein to become
inflamed and collapse. - PICC(Peripherally Inserted Central Catheter)
- Higher concentration is possible
- End of lumen is threaded to a larger vessel with
greater dilution capacity
33Parenteral Access
- Short Term Central Catheter
- Subclavian vein central catheter
- line inserted into Subclavian and threaded to the
superior vena cava - Provides maximum dilution of parenteral solution
and no damage to the vein lumen - Risk of infection
34Parenteral Access
- Long-term Access
- When access is required for many months or
longer, a permanent catheter is surgically placed - A port is imbedded at the skin level or under the
skin which is accessible - Tunneled central venous catheter(Hickman,
Broviac, Groshong) Tunneled under skin with
external device for access on chest wall - Implanted port silicone catheter with titanium
disk placed under the skin
35When only peripheral access is available but you
need to provide total nutrition without the use
of the GI tract, you would select which of the
following options?
- Enteral Nutrition
- A nasogastric tube
- A Hickman catheter at the chest to the subclavian
vein - PICC
- A needle jejunostomy
36Terminology with Parenteral Solutions
- D Dextrose
- W Water
- NS Normal Saline (0.9) NaCl solution 0.9 g
NaCl/ 100 ml - D5W 5 Dextrose solution in water
- (5 g Dextrose in 100 ml water)
- D51/2 NS 5 Dextrose in 1/2 Normal Saline (0.45 g
NaCl in 100 ml Water)
37Nutrients in Parenteral Soln
- Protein
- Combination of essential and non-essential aas
- Generally 15 to 20 of total Kcal needs in most
solutions - Often a 10 amino acid solution is used
- 10 g / 100 ml which represents 100 grams/liter
- Final concentration often expressed as the
concentration in the final volume after mix with
CHO and Fat
38Fat in Parenteral Soln
- Usually comes in 10 or 20 solutions
- 10 represents 1.1 kcal/ml(eg 0.9 cal/ml from
soy oil, 0.2 cal/ml from glycerol and
phospholipids(egg yolk)) - 20 represents 2.0 kcal/ml(1.8 cal/ml from soy
oil, 0.2 kcal/ml from glycerol and phospholipids) - Usually composed of safflower, soy oils with
lecithin as an emulsifier to hold in solution - Generally 20 to 30 of Kcal
- Dont exceed 60 (2.5 g/kg/d)
39CHO in Parenteral Solution
- Dextrose monohydrate
- D Glucose with a water attached
- Concentrations range from 5 to 70
- Shouldnt exceed 5 mg/kg/min
- Used to spare protein and provide kcals
40Calculation of Osmolality
- Dextrose grams/l x 5
- Protein grams x 10
- Fat is isotonic so no osmotic force
- electrolytes further add to osmolarity
- 50 g of dextrose plus 30 grams of protein
- (50 x 5) (30 x 10) 550 mOsm/l
41Indications for Peripheral Vein Feedings
- 1. Short term enteral feeding again in 7 d
- 2. Transition with enteral feeding
- 3. Mild to mod malnutritionsupplemental
nutrition needed - 4. Normal or mild elevation of metabolic rate
- 5. No organ failure or fluid restriction
42Indications for Central Vein Feeding
- 1.Unable to enteral feed for 7 days
- 2. Mod to severely elevated metabolic rate
- 3. Moderate to severe malnutrition
- 4. Cardiac, renal, or hepatic failure or other
conditions limiting fluid - 5. Limited access to peripheral veins
- 6. Able to access central vein
43Compounding Methods
- Two methods of prescription compounding
- 1. All components except fat
- 2. All components including fat
- May be batch mixed to save money
- or may be individually prescribed and mixed
- Is done by pharmacist in aseptic conditions
44If a person had extensive damage to their GI
tract because of a motor cycle accident which
required resection of the duodenum and much of
the jejunum, which of the following would be
appropriate methods of providing calories
- Oral intake only
- Nasogastric tube only
- Peripheral Parenteral nutrition only
- Total Parenteral Nutrition
- None of the above
45Administration of TPN
- Continuous Infusion
- Initiate at 42 cc/hr or 1000 L/d
- increase incrementally until goal rate is reached
over next two to three days - If TPN is interrupted, infuse D10W or D20W until
TPN can be restarted - Guard against hypoglycemia
46Cyclic Infusion
- To free individuals who are capable of mobility
- TPN for 12 to 18 hour infusion periods are
possible. Allows pt to be mobile for 6 to 12
hours - Cyclic administration is established incrementally
47Monitoring and Problem Solving
- Actual intake of TPN is monitored
- Monitor Growth, weight
- Metabolic parameters Table 23-7 p549
- serum lytes, BG, Hb, etc
- General
- Volume of infusate, oral intake, urinary output
- Infection
- Clin Observations temp., WBC, cultures
48Refeeding syndrome
- With intro of energy substrates following a
period of no intake, may cause Refeeding Syndrome - Shift of phosphorus, potassium from serum to
intracellular sites for ATP production - causes hypophosphatemia, hypokalemia
- Can be severe and life threatening
- Needs to be monitored and may require additional
IV replacement of P and K
49Transitional Feeding
- Parenteral to Enteral
- begin at 30 cc/hr
- increase 25-30 cc/hr every 8 to 24 hours
- Parenteral solution is reduced accordingly
- Parenteral to Oral
- Monitor oral intake less predictable than above
- Reduce Parenteral accordingly
- Enteral to Oral
- Adjust to intermittent feeding first
50Nutrition Support in Other Settings
- Long-term Care
- More happening in nursing facilities
- Home Care
- People are at home receiving nutrition support
- Concerns
- motivation
- familys ability to handle
- benefit of receiving nut support
- limitations such as physical
51Ethical Issues
- End of life decisions
- Based on advance directives from patient
- What is the patients desire about end of life
support? - Standards and Guidelines
- American Society of Parenteral and Enteral
Nutrition - Guidelines for use of nutrition support
521000 ml D5W would provide
- 5 grams of amino acids
- 5 grams of D glucose
- 50 grams of dextrose
- 5 grams of fat
- 5 grams of water
53Problems
- 3 liters of D5W was given via peripheral IV over
a 24 hour period. How many kcals did it provide?
(1 gram Dextrose monohydrate 3.4 kcals) - (5 g/100ml) (1000ml/l)(3 l)(3.4 kcal/g)510 kcal
54Problem
- 2.5 l of 3.5 Dextrose
- (3.5 g/100ml)(1000ml/l)(2.5 l)(3.4 kcal/g)
- 297.5 kcal
55Problem
- 3 l of 25 Dextrose and 3.5 Amino Acids
- How many kcals and kcal from each?
- (25g/100ml)(1000ml/l)(3 l)(3.4kcal/g) 2550kcal
from CHO - (3.5g/100ml)(1000ml/l)(3 l)(4kcal/g) 420 kcal
from PRO - Total 2550 420 2970 2550/297086 from CHO
and 14 PRO
56Problem
- 500 ml of 10 fat emulsion distributed in 2.5 l
of TPN solution which has a final concentration
of 20 Dextrose and 3.5 Amino acids. - How many total kcals and what from each energy
nutrient?
57- (20 g/100ml)(1000ml/l)(2.5 l)(3.4 kcal/g) 1700
Cal from CHO - (3.5 g/100ml)(1000ml/l)(2.5 l)(4 kcal/g) 350
Cal from PRO
58Problem (cont)
- 10 fat emulsion (1.1 kcal/ml) (500 ml) 550
kcal from Fat - Total 1700 350 550 2600 kcal
- 1700/2600 65 from CHO
- 350/2600 13.4 from Pro
- 550/2600 21 from Fat
59Nut Assessment
- Pt requires 2200 kcal
- 60 kcal from CHO
- 25 kcal from fat
- 15 kcal from PRO
- How would you formulate this?
- Fat first you need 2200 x .25 550 kcal
- 20 fat emulsion _at_ 2.0 kcal/ml
- 550 kcal/ 2 kcal/ml 225 ml 20 soln
60Nut assessment
- Final volume of 2000 ml
- Fat contributes 225 ml
- For 60 Cal from CHO 2200 kcal x .6 1320
kcal/3.4 kcal/g 388 g CHO needed - Using a 50 Dextrose solution at 50 g/100 ml
- How much of this solution would you need to add?
- 388g/50 g/100 ml 776 ml of the 50 Dextrose
solution CHO contributes 776 ml
61Protein needed?
- For 15 Cal from Protein 2200 kcal x .15 330
kcal/4kcal/g 82.5 g PRO - Using a 10 amino acid solution at 10g/100 ml
- 82.5 g/10g/100 ml 825 ml of the 10 amino acid
solution - The amino acid solution contributes 825 ml
- Total volume 225 ml(fat) 776(CHO) 825(AA)
1826 ml - Add Vitamins and Minerals
- Add water to make the required volume