4 - Nutrition in Medicine Flashcards
Undernutrition
A form of malnutrition resulting from a reduced supply of food or from inability to digest, assimilate and utilise the necessary nutrients
Reasons for under nutrition in hospitals
Confusion, treatment, reduced ability to swallow, shit food, shit teeth, difficulty in self-feeding
Consequences of undernutrition in the community
Falls
dependency
Infection
Depression
Consequences of undernutrition in hospital
Increased length of stay
Increased dependency
Increased mortality
Symptoms of under nutrition in catabolic patients
Decreased muscle mass
Decreased visceral proteins
Impaired everything
Multiple organ failure
Symptoms of under nutrition in healthy patients
Fatigue, general weakness
Depression
Changes in behaviour
Complete exhaustion
Causes for reduced nutritional intake
Anorexia
Dysphagia
Nil by mouth
Causes of increased nutritional losses
Malabsorption
Wound exudate/burns
Increased nutritional requirements
Inflammation/infection
Pyrexia
Tissue healing
Metabolic effects
How to combat malnutrition in hospitals
Use MUST (Malnutrition universal screening tool) Bmi, weight loss + acute disease = score --> management guidelines
How do you assess nutritional status
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
Clinical investigations for malnutrition
Anthropometrics - Skin thickness (fat), mid upper arm circumference (MUAC)
DEXA
Handgrip dynamometry
What is your Total Energy Expenditure made up of
Basal metabolic rate
Thermic effect of food
Physical activity
Stress factors
Nitrogen requirements
0.75/kg/day
How to measure fluid
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