Malnutrition Flashcards

1
Q

What are the risk factors for malnutrition?

A

over 65
in residential care or hospital
Long term conditions - eg cancer, dementia
Alcohol or drug dependency

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2
Q

What are the three main ways that someone may become malnourised?

A

reduced nutritional intake
increased nutritional requirements
inability to utilise nutrients ingested

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3
Q

Why might someone have reduced nutrient intake?

A
poverty 
low mood 
dysphagia 
repeated nil by mouth 
reduced appetite 
nausea eg from medications
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4
Q

Why might someone have increased nutritional requirements?

A

infection
surgery
wound healing

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5
Q

Why might someone be unable to use the nutrients they are ingesting?

A
diarrhoea 
vomiting 
drains 
wounds 
pancreatic insufficiency
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6
Q

How might someone with malnutriton present?

A

Low or high BMI
history of significant weight loss
comorbidities

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7
Q

What are the complications of malnutrition?

A

poor immunity and recurrent infections
muscle wasting, reduced mobility, increased falls,
imapried wound healing
micronutrient deficiencies - eg selinium, zinc, vit D deficiency
Osteomalacia
irone deficiency anaemia

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8
Q

How would you investigate malnutrition?

A

Bloods - FBC, U+Es, haematinics
MUST tool
Dietician assessment

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9
Q

What are the 3 key measurements/info needed for the MUST screening tool?

A
  1. BMI
  2. Percentage unplanned weight loss in last 3-6 months
  3. Acute disease effect - is the pt acutely ill and there is likely to be/has been no nutritional intake for 5 days
    (Add scores from step 1-3 together)
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10
Q

How can you manage malnutrition?

A

Treat underlying condition if any
Provide help and advice on food and drink
Record needs for special diets, follow local policy
1. Food first - snacks, drinks, food fortification
2. oral nutrient supplements
- liquid, powder or semi-solid
- macro or micronutrients
- Milkshake, juice, pudding, powders, soup, jelly- style (fortisip, fortijuice, forticreme)
3. Enteral feeding
- directly into the stomach, jejunum or duodenum
-Short term: NG tube, NJ tube
- long term: PEG tube, PEJ tube
4. Parenteral - IV

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11
Q

What are the short term methods of enteral feeding?

A

Nasogastric tube - into stomach

Nasojejunal tube - into jejunum

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12
Q

What are long term methods of enteral feeding?

A

PEG – percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy

PEJ – percutaneous endoscopic jejunostomy (Post pyloric/surgical JEJ)

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13
Q

What are the advantages of enteral vs parenteral feeding?

A

Enteral is cheaper

Enteral perseveres gut mucosa and integrity

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14
Q

What are the disadvantages of enteral feeding?

A

tube can be uncomfortable to place

nausea, satiety, constipation or diarrhoea

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15
Q

How do you check that an NG tube is in the right place?

A

aspirate pH measurement - gold standard - <5.5

second line - Xray confirmation

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16
Q

How do you check that an NJ tube is in the right place?

A

needs X-ray

Can’t check position using pH (as not going to stomach)

17
Q

How is an NG tube inserted?

A

On a ward

18
Q

How is an NJ tube inserted?

A

Under radiological guidance

19
Q

Give 3 uses of a PEG tube

A
dysphagia eg stroke 
head and neck surgery
neurological conditions
Cystic fibrosis 
oral intake inadequate and likely to be long term
20
Q

Give 3 uses of a PEJ tube

A

delayed gastric emptying
Upper GI or pancreatic surgery
in pts with high risk of aspiration
severe acute pancreatitis

21
Q

When is parenteral feeding used?

A

when the gut is inaccessible or unable to absorb sufficient nutrients to sustain nutritional status

22
Q

Give 3 conditions where parenteral nutrition is used

A
short gut syndrome 
Gastrointestinal fistula 
Bowel obstruction (bowel rest)
Severe malnutrition, significant weight loss
23
Q

How is MUST scored?

A

0- low risk
1- medium risk
≥ 2- high risk

24
Q

What would you do if a patient scored 0 (low risk) on the must tool?

A

Monitor MUST level:

  • Hospital – weekly
  • Care Homes – monthly
  • Community – annually for special groups e.g. those >75 yrs
25
Q

What would you do if a patient scored 1 (medium risk) on the must tool?

A

Document dietary intake for 3 days:

  1. If adequate – little concern and repeat screening
    - Hospital – weekly
    - Care Home – at least monthly
    Community – at least every 2-3 months
  2. If inadequate and there is clinical concern
    - follow local policy, set goals, improve and increase overall nutritional intake, monitor and review care plan regularly
26
Q

What would you do if a patient scored ≥2 (high risk) on the must tool?

A
  1. Refer to dietitian, Nutritional Support Team or implement local policy
  2. Set goals, improve and increase overall nutritional intake
  3. Monitor and review care plan
    - Hospital – weekly
    - Care Home – monthly
    - Community – monthly
27
Q

What is the alternative measurements to estimate BMI?

A

mid upper arm circumference

28
Q

What is the alternative measurements to estimate height?

A

ulnar length

29
Q

What are the different ways we can support normal food intake eg in pts with dementia?

A

Red tray
Background music
Meal time assistance
Social elements of eating

30
Q

Do PEG tubes have any benefit in advanced dementia for the long-term?

A

No

31
Q

What are the considerations before inserting a PEG tube for a patient with dementia?

A
  • Can the PEG tube be managed at home or do they need to go to a nursing home?
  • Are you taking away the quality of life aspect of eating
  • no long term benefit in advanced dementia