Considerations in Nutrition Support of the Older Adult Flashcards
Pharmacologic agents such as histamine2-receptor antagonists (H2 blockers) and proton-pump inhibitors (PPIs) are commonly prescribed for a variety of upper GI disorders such as prevention and treatment of gastric ulceration. Prolonged use of these medications may most commonly contribute to deficiency of which of the following micronutrients?
1: Vitamin C
2: Potassium
3: Vitamin B6
4: Vitamin B12
4: Vitamin B12
Risk of developing vitamin B12 deficiency increases as gastric acid production declines with age, and also with use of acid lowering medications (H2 blockers and PPIs). Vitamin B12 bound to food must be released from the protein, a process that requires the presence of gastric acid. After being released from the protein, the B12 molecule binds with intrinsic factor and is absorbed in the small intestine. Vitamin B12 deficiency has been associated with use of both H2 blockers and PPIs among older adults, particularly those receiving PPIs over the course of several years, even when being supplemented with oral B12 -containing vitamins. Although the literature is mixed in whether H2 and PPI use can lead to B12 deficiency, this is likely due to differing definitions of what constitutes vitamin B12 deficiency. Clinicians should be cognizant of vitamin B12 status, especially in older adults receiving acid lowering medications.The other listed micronutrients are less likely to be affected by decreased gastric acid.
An 85 year old woman is admitted to the hospital with a history of stroke, dysphagia, poor appetite and oral intake for one month and 10% weight loss. The patient is evaluated by the speech pathologist who recommends a pureed, honey thick liquid diet. Which nutrition intervention would be most appropriate for this patient?
1: Recommend calorie count
2: Initiate peripheral parenteral nutrition
3: Prescribe total parenteral nutrition
4: Initiate nocturnal enteral nutrition
4: Initiate nocturnal enteral nutrition
The most appropriate intervention would be to provide enteral feedings to supplement oral diet. Common indications for enteral nutrition include stroke and other neurologic disorders that impairs swallowing ability. Since there is no evidence of compromised gastrointestinal function, parenteral nutrition is not indicated.
Which of the following medications is most likely to cause constipation in a patient receiving enteral nutrition (EN)?
1: Clindamycin
2: Kayexalate
3: Codeine
4: Magnesium oxide
3: Codeine
Medications are a common cause of diarrhea in patients receiving enteral nutrition. Some medications induce a hyperosmolar environment within the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, pulling fluid into the GI tract and causing a laxative effect, such as those that contain magnesium or sorbitol, and kayexalate. Antibiotics commonly cause loose stool by decreasing beneficial microbiota within the GI tract, and some may increase the risk of <i>C. difficile</i> overgrowth. Codeine may actually decrease GI motility and contribute to constipation; long term use of opioids may contribute to overflow diarrhea where liquid stool flows around stool blockage.
Which of the following is NOT appropriate to tell a family regarding nutrition at the end of life?
1: Dying patients rarely feel hungry or thirsty
2: Fewer calories are needed at the end of life
3: The experience of eating remains unchanged at the end of life
4: Patients should not be made to feel guilty if they do not wish to eat
3: The experience of eating remains unchanged at the end of life
It is important for family members to be educated regarding the process of decreased food/fluid intake during the dying process. As illness advances, nutritional needs change and fewer calories are needed. The experience of eating can change from a pleasant one to a distressing one for a patient as the disease process alters the patient’s desire to eat. Dying patients rarely feel hungry or thirsty because the natural process of dying shuts down normal functions. Patients should not be made to feel guilty if they do not try to eat. Diminished food and fluid intake are natural parts of the dying process.
A patient in a persistent vegetative state has made their wishes known regarding artificial nutrition and hydration whose wishes have been made known through an advance directive. The decision to terminate enteral feeding for this patient is based on the ethical principle of
1: justice.
2: autonomy.
3: beneficence.
4: nonmalfeasance.
2: autonomy.
If an incompetent individual has an advance directive regarding artificial nutrition and hydration, the principle of autonomy should guide the health care team in making a decision regarding artificial nutrition and hydration. If an advance directive is not available, the principles of beneficence and nonmalfeasance are more central. Autonomy, beneficence, nonmalfeasance, and justice are the four ethical principles. Autonomy is an ethical principle based on respecting and upholding the patient’s right to self-determination. Beneficence is defined as an ethical principle when health care providers actively seek the good of the patient above all other priorities. Nonmalfeasance, “to do no harm” relates to health care providers actively seeking to prevent, minimize and relive needless suffering and pain avoid harming the patient. Justice is related to the fair distribution of resources.
Which of the following best reflects the use of artificial nutrition and hydration (ANH) in patients with a Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) status?
1: The DNR status is a contraindication to the provision of ANH
2: The DNR status should not preclude the initiation of ANH if the indications exist
3: The provision of ANH to a patient with a DNR status is based on individual state laws
4: ANH cannot be withheld or withdrawn in a patient with a DNR order, even if all agree that ANH is no longer meeting the desired goal
2: The DNR status should not preclude the initiation of ANH if the indications exist
A Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) or Do Not Attempt Resuscitation (DNAR) order is not a contraindication to the provision of artificial nutrition and hydration (ANH) in any state. If the indications for ANH exist, then ANH should be implemented, even as a time-limited trial. ANH can be withheld or withdrawn in patients with a DNR or DNAR if all concerned agree ANH is not meeting the agreed-upon goal.
Which of the following best describes the use of artificial nutrition and hydration (ANH) in terminally ill patients?
1: Those who receive ANH have a more comfortable death
2: Those who have dysphagia survive longer with ANH
3: Those who receive ANH have fewer electrolyte abnormalities
4: Those who forego ANH experience fewer side effects
4: Those who forego ANH experience fewer side effects
A common fallacy in terminally ill patients is that dehydration is thought to be an uncomfortable state. In fact, at the end of life, patients often experience a decrease in hunger and thirst drive. The analgesic theory proposes that starvation boosts the production of ketones, thereby having an anesthetic effect. Aggressive artificial nutrition and hydration (ANH) can be more harmful and can produce life-threatening symptoms including edema, ascites, nausea, vomiting, and pulmonary congestion. Numerous studies report that patients who are dying have electrolyte values that run in the normal range.
A patient has an advanced directive stating a desire to forego medical technology, including nutrition and hydration, in order to prolong life. The patient is now in an irreversible vegetative state. In deciding whether to continue nutrition and hydration by medical means, the patient’s surrogate decision-maker must:
1: consult with a lawyer regarding physician orders for life-sustaining treatment.
2: have a psychiatric evaluation in order to be declared competent to make decisions in the patient’s care.
3: honor the patient’s expressed wish to withdraw nutrition and hydration by medical means.
4: decide, based upon own values, whether or not to withdraw the patient’s nutrition and hydration by medical means.
3: honor the patient’s expressed wish to withdraw nutrition and hydration by medical means.
Advance directives are documents that allow individuals to document their treatment preferences and identify a surrogate or proxy decision maker to act in the patient’s state when he or she loses the ability to make decisions. Use or nonuse of artificial nutrition and hydration is a component of some advance directives. In the Cruzan case, the US Supreme Court assumed that a competent individual has the same right to refuse life sustaining treatment (including nutrition and hydration by medical means) as to refuse any other kind of medical intervention. In the absence of an advanced directive, where evidence of an incompetent person’s previously expressed wish not to be kept alive by medical technologies meets state evidentiary standards, the exercise of that choice by a surrogate decision-maker must also be honored.
In an older adult who requires long-term home EN, which of the following complications is most often overlooked?
1: Tube leaking
2: Constipation
3: Decreased urine output
4: Skin problems at tube site
3: Decreased urine output
Although decreased urination, tube clogging, tube leaking and skin problems at tube site are all commonly reported patient complications of home EN, decreased urination has been found to be the most common complication in a group of elderly patients receiving home enteral nutrition. Decreased urination likely indicates inadequate fluid intake while on enteral feeding and the potential for dehydration and risk for acute kidney injury.
Vitamin D (25, hydroxyvitamin D) deficiency is defined as a serum level of less than
1: 20 ng/mL.
2: 50 ng/mL.
3: 100 ng/mL.
4: 120 ng/mL.
1: 20 ng/mL.
Measuring serum 25, hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] can determine vitamin D adequacy. A 25(OH)D value between 21-29 ng/ml signifies vitamin D insufficiency. A 25(OH)D value < 20 ng/ml is indicative of vitamin D deficiency. A 25(OH)D level ≥30 ng/ml is representative of adequate vitamin D stores.
Vitamin D (25, hydroxyvitamin D) deficiency can manifest as
1: muscle weakness.
2: decreased production parathyroid hormone (PTH).
3: hypotension.
4: decreased normal serum lipid levels.
1: muscle weakness.
Older adults are more at risk for vitamin D deficiency since they are more likely to stay indoors, have reduced ability to synthesize vitamin D in the skin when exposed to sunlight, use sunscreens and may have inadequate vitamin D intake. There are vitamin D receptors (VDRs) throughout the body including the parathyroid glands, muscle tissue, cardiovascular system and kidneys. Without vitamin D binding to VDRs, parathyroid hormone excretion is reduced resulting in increased production of PTH; stimulation of muscle fibers is decreased causing muscle weakness; renin activity is increased resulting in hypertension; and there is a potential for hyperlipidemia given the need for vitamin D in lipid cell membranes formation. In Vitamin D deficiency PTH production is increased.
Which of the following is the hallmark of frailty seen with older adults?
1: Sarcopenia
2: Chronic inflammation
3: Dementia
4: Chronic disease
1: Sarcopenia
Frailty is described as a multifactorial syndrome that has various phenotypes and leads to significant changes in quality of life, vulnerability, and disability in older adults. Sarcopenia (loss of muscle mass and strength) is a hallmark of frailty. Other characteristics include unintentional weight loss (10 pounds in past 1 year), self-reported exhaustion, weakness (hand-grip strength), slow walking speed, and low physical activity. Inflammation of chronic disease, nutrition status, and oxidative stress also play a role in frailty.
Which of the following complications of enteral nutrition (EN) is the most potentially dangerous in the older adult?
1: Diarrhea
2: Abdominal distension
3: Leaking around the enterostomy tube insertion site
4: Aspiration
4: Aspiration
Sarcopenia and frailty seen in older adult populations are linked to dysphagia which can lead to aspiration of oral secretions. Pulmonary aspiration may result from reflux or muscle weakness and is one of the most serious complications of EN. It can result in pneumonia or death. While diarrhea, abdominal distension, and leaking are undesirable, their overall impact on morbidity and mortality are not as great as that of aspiration.
A 75 year old male with history of aspiration pneumonia who was previously deemed unsafe for an oral diet is now experiencing aspiration while receiving continuous enteral nutrition via his percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) tube. Which of the following long-term feeding options would be the most appropriate?
1: Peipheral parenteral nutrition (PN)
2: Central parenteral nutrition (PN)
3: Nasojejunostomy tube placement
4: Percutaneous endoscopic jejunostomy (PEJ) feeding
4: Percutaneous endoscopic jejunostomy (PEJ) feeding
Small bowel feedings are the preferred choice in patients at increased risk for aspiration. PEJ tube placement would allow delivery of nutrients into the jejunum, which may minimize the potential for reflux and aspiration. The long-term small bowel access provided by a PEJ tube as opposed to a nasojejunostomy tube would be the best plan for this patient to prevent aspiration in the long-term. Parenteral nutrition is not indicated because the gut is functional.
An older adult receiving PN therapy may be more susceptible to metabolic complications related to
1: macronutrient deficiencies.
2: impaired cardiac function.
3: impaired thyroid function.
4: impaired autoimmune function.
2: impaired cardiac function.
Older adults have increased metabolic complications associated with PN therapy due to insulin resistance, impaired cardiac and renal functions and micronutrient deficiencies. Repletion of lean body mass (LBM) is slower.
Which of the following tools includes the assessment of a long-term care resident’s ability to maintain adequate nutrition and hydration and is mandated by the Center for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) for certified long-term care facilities?
1: Minimum Data Set (MDS)
2: Resident Assessment Protocols (RAP)
3: UtilizationGuidelines
4: Trigger Legend
1: Minimum Data Set (MDS)
The Center for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) mandates that certified long-term care facilities use the Resident Assessment Instrument (RAI) as one screening and assessment tool. The RAI provides an interdisciplinary framework for resident assessments and the identification of problems. Problems identified are then required to have individualized care plans. The RAI consists of the Minimum Data Set (MDS) and the Care Area Assessment (CAA). The MDS is completed by the members of the interprofessional team who use it to assess all aspects of clinical status and facilitate problem identification (“triggers”). The CAA is then the investigation of “trigger” areas from the MDS to determine if further planning and intervention is required. The nutrition component of this assessment is found in section K of the MDS. This will assess the resident’s ability to maintain adequate nutrition and hydration and covers swallowing disorders, height and weight, weight changes, and nutrition approaches. Nutrition approaches include the use of mechanically altered and therapeutic diets and artificial nutrition and hydration (Nutrition support, including PN and EN), specifically documenting the mode and percentage of required intake by the artificial route.
Which one of the following vitamin deficiencies is most likely to occur in a person who consumes alcohol on a regular basis?
1: Vitamin K
2: Vitamin C
3: Vitamin D
4: Vitamin B-1
4: Vitamin B-1
Long-term alcohol abuse may lead to Wernicke encephalopahty and Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome, which are associated with thiamin (vitamin B1 ) deficiency. Regular alcohol intake can affect absorption and/or utilization of vitamins B6 , B12 , B9 (folic acid), and C. Additionally, fat soluble vitamins can also be impacted as alcohol inhibits fat absorption and thereby impairs absorption vitamins A, E, and D. Iron and zinc absorption may also be affected by excessive alcohol intake. However, frank deficiency would be more common with thiamin.