Nutrition Flashcards
Name the brief risk assessment for nutrition used commonly in hospitals? [1]
MUST
How do you perform a full nutritional asessment? [5]
A: Anthropometery (Weight, % weight change, BMI, MUAC, skin fold thickness)
B: Biochemistry (FBC, U&E, Ca, B12 & Folate, CRP & HbA1c)
C: Clinical (disease states or symptoms)
D: Dietary (energy and fluid requirements)
E: Environment (social and physiological factors)
What are vegans at risk of being malnourished in? [3]
- B12
- Iron
- Ca
- Iodine
- Omega-3 fatty acids
What is a BMI that is defined as malnutrition? [1]
What % weight loss, in what time period is classified as malnutrition? [1]
Combination of the two?
Malnutrition:
a Body Mass Index (BMI) of less than 18.5; or
unintentional weight loss greater than 10% within the last 3-6 months; or
a BMI of less than 20 and unintentional weight loss greater than 5% within the last 3-6 months
Describe how nutrional feeds can be administerd
- Sip feeds
- Nasogastric (NG tube): narrow feeding tube is placed through your nose down into your stomach.
-
Gastrostomy:
a) Percutaneous endoscopic gastromy (PEG) - tube into stomach
b) ‘Buttons’
What is the name of the criteria used to diagnose a patient with anorexia nervosa? [1]
State the 3 key features of the criteria [3]
DSM 5 criteria:
- Restriction of energy intake relative to requirements leading to a significantly low body weight in the context of age, sex, developmental trajectory, and physical health.
- Intense fear of gaining weight or becoming fat, even though underweight.
- Disturbance in the way in which one’s body weight or shape is experienced, undue influence of body weight or shape on self-evaluation, or denial of the seriousness of the current low body weight.
Common feature of anorexia nervosa? [5]
- Features of anorexia nervosa:
- Excessive weight loss
- Amenorrhoea
- Lanugo hair is fine, soft hair across most of the body
- Hypokalaemia
- Hypotension
- Hypothermia
- Changes in mood, anxiety and depression
- Solitude
Describe what is meant by short bowel syndrome? [2]
Small / large intestine becomes physcially shorter when a portion is removed by surgery OR if becomes damaged in way that makes non-functional
Leads to poor absorption of water and nutrients
Which investigations are used to investigate SBS? [4]
FBC:
- anaemia caused by iron, copper, folate or b12 deficiences (all common in SBS)
- thrombocytopenia (indicates volume depletion)
- haemoconcentration (indicates volume depletion)
U&Es:
- Hypo/hypernatraemia: reflects hydration status
- Hypomagnesaemia: common due to diarrhoea
- Hypokalemia: common
Low serum albumin
INR: used to detect vitamin K deficiency
Name a disease common to have SBS in [1]
Crohns Disease
What does management of SBS depend upon? [1]
Describe treatment of SBS [5]
Treatment depends upon the extent and anatomy of bowel resection.
Management:
- Nutrient and fluid supplementation
- Parenteral nutrition: is slowly pumped into the blood stream through a drip;
- ORS
- Increase calorie intake (2-3x prior to SBS)
- Medicines to minimise fluid losses and to control diarrhoea
- Surgical interventions to aid intestinal adaptation
- PPI
State 4 physiologal mechanims that are reduced because of protein-calories malnutrition [4]
- Muscle function
- Delayed hypersensitivity (common immune response that occurs through direct action of sensitized T cells when stimulated by contact with antigen)
- Wound healing: increases infection rates
- Gonadal function: decreases fertility
Define parenteral nutrition [1]
Describe the different types of parenteral lines (2_
- Time [1]
- Location [1]
- Other nutrition [1]
PN feeding: IV administration of nutrition outside of the gastrointestinal tract.
Peripheral PN:
- smaller vein: neck or limbs
- partial parenteral nutrition
- Short term ( < 14 days)
Central / Total PN:
- Given over longer periods ( > 28 days)
- When IV is the only nutrition provided
- usually SVC
State 4 risks of peripheral and central PN feeding [4]
- thrombophlebitis (inflammatory process that causes a blood clot to form and block one or more veins, usually in the legs)
- sepsis
- hyperglycaemia
- sodium overload
State how central or peripheral PN can cause [2]
- thrombophlebitis
- hyperglycaemia
thrombophlebitis
- Peripheral PN demands careful surveillance for thrombophlebitis as parenteral feed is very irritant to veins
- caused by hyperosmality of nutrients as they irritate veins
hyperglycaemia
- glucose enters the peripheral circulation, reaching high serum levels and producing sustained hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia
- (can be avoided by monitoring plasma glucose often, adjusting the insulin dose in the TPN solution, and giving subcutaneous insulin as needed)