Nutrition Flashcards
What is 1kcal?
Amount of energy required to heat 1kg of water by 1 degree celsius at sea level
4.2kJ
- 1g of fat = 9kcal
- 1g of protein = 4kcal
- 1g of carbohydrate = 4kcal
What is the basal metabolic rate?
25kcal/kg/day
Male: 1750kcal
Female: 1400kcal
+ dietary-induced thermogenesis, non-exercise activity thermogenesis, exercise activity thermogenesis
= Male: 2200kcal
= Female: 1800kcal
What are the properties of the macronutrients?
PROTEIN (~17%-20% of diet)
- source of nitrogen required for muscle, DNA, albumin, etc.
- expensive in terms of price and energy
CARBOHYDRATE (~50% of diet)
- stored as glycogen in liver and muscle
- used by all organs
FAT (~30% of diet)
- high density energy storage
- broken down into fatty acids and glycerol
- converted into ketones and glucose in starvation stage
What are the properties of the micronutrients?
VITAMINS:
- A = liver, vegetables (retina/skin health)
- B1 = red meat, grains, beans (neurone health)
- B9 (folic acid) = leafy vegetables (bone marrow)
- B12 = red meat (neurones and bone marrow)
- C = fruit (collagen synthesis)
ELECTROLYTES:
- 1mM of sodium/kg/day
- 1mM of potassium/kg/day
TRACE ELEMENTS: selenium, zinc, phosphate
What is the feeding hierarchy?
Normal oral feeding
Oral nutrition supplements
NG feed: short/medium term, nutritional bridge to recovery/gastrostomy
PEG: medium/long term, support for chronic disease, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, palliative care
RIG: if upper GI tract inaccessible
Parenteral nutrition: intestinal failure, inaccessible/obstructed GI tract, can use alongside enteral nutrition
What is the calorie content of PEG feeds?
1kcal/ml (Nutrison)
OR 1.5-2.0kcal/ml (Nutrison Energy)
at 100ml/hr
What is the dosage for parenteral feeding?
IV fluids 25ml/kg/day + losses
How much sodium is in a litre of saline?
154mmol