4 - Nutrition in Medicine Flashcards

1
Q

Undernutrition

A

A form of malnutrition resulting from a reduced supply of food or from inability to digest, assimilate and utilise the necessary nutrients

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2
Q

Reasons for under nutrition in hospitals

A

Confusion, treatment, reduced ability to swallow, shit food, shit teeth, difficulty in self-feeding

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3
Q

Consequences of undernutrition in the community

A

Falls
dependency
Infection
Depression

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4
Q

Consequences of undernutrition in hospital

A

Increased length of stay
Increased dependency
Increased mortality

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5
Q

Symptoms of under nutrition in catabolic patients

A

Decreased muscle mass
Decreased visceral proteins
Impaired everything
Multiple organ failure

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6
Q

Symptoms of under nutrition in healthy patients

A

Fatigue, general weakness
Depression
Changes in behaviour
Complete exhaustion

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7
Q

Causes for reduced nutritional intake

A

Anorexia
Dysphagia
Nil by mouth

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8
Q

Causes of increased nutritional losses

A

Malabsorption

Wound exudate/burns

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9
Q

Increased nutritional requirements

A

Inflammation/infection
Pyrexia
Tissue healing
Metabolic effects

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10
Q

How to combat malnutrition in hospitals

A
Use MUST (Malnutrition universal screening tool) 
Bmi, weight loss + acute disease = score --> management guidelines
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11
Q

How do you assess nutritional status

A

Subjective Global Assessment
(SGA)
 History
 Weight and BMI
 Weight changes (consider ascites and oedema)
 Appetite, early satiety, and taste changes
 Diet history and adequacy of intake
 GI symptoms: persistent nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, or constipation
 Energy and activity levels

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12
Q

Clinical investigations for malnutrition

A

Anthropometrics - Skin thickness (fat), mid upper arm circumference (MUAC)
DEXA
Handgrip dynamometry

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13
Q

What is your Total Energy Expenditure made up of

A

Basal metabolic rate
Thermic effect of food
Physical activity
Stress factors

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14
Q

Nitrogen requirements

A

0.75/kg/day

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15
Q

How to measure fluid

A

Add up non-urinary output (ng tube, stoma, fistula)
insensible loss (sweat) 500ml + 10% for every rise in 1degree c
Allow 1-1.5L urine daily

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16
Q

Enteral feeding + when you would use it

A

Feeding tube gastrostomy

  • with reduced consciousness
  • unsafe swallow (parkinsons)
  • Cystic fibrosis
17
Q

Parenteral feeding + when you’d use it

A

Feeding via IV

  • When intestinal failure - Intestinal obstruction
  • Short bowel
  • Acute pancreatitis
18
Q

When should you not give parenteral feeding

A

Before or after major surgery

In pancreatitis

19
Q

Problems with NG tube

A

Aspiration
Discomfort
Diarrhoea

20
Q

Problems with PEG

A

Diarrhoea

Infection

21
Q

Problems with PN

A

Infection
Electrolyte disturbances
Hepatic dysfunction
Hyperglycaemia