Nutrition in medicine Flashcards

1
Q

how do we treat malnutrition and diet deficienes

A
  • Increased intake of normal diet
  • Prescribe supplements
  • Specialist enteral feeds
  • Nasogastric tube
  • Gastrostomy tube
  • Parenteral nutrition
    As you go down the list it applies to fewer patients
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2
Q

what are specialist entral feeds

A

– completely balance, has all nutrients that you need so you could live on it, they are useful but quite expensive

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3
Q

how do you know someone needs to be watched for nutrition in a hospital

A
  • red tray - make sure that someone takes notes and helps them eat
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4
Q

when is tube feeding used

A
  • this is used when patients can’t or won’t swallow but the gut is working
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5
Q

what happens if you don’t use the gut when it does work

A
  • if the gut is working then we should use it, the gut does not like being starved,
  • most of the bodily cells get nutrients from the bloodstream,
  • the gut mucosa has a blood supply and it also like nutrients in the lumen of the gut and if you don’t have that the gut atrophies and the vili shrink and excess bacteria grows where there not supposed to go and you get more transfer of bacteria from the lumen to the bloodstream and circulate around the body and cause other endogenous infections
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6
Q

what people make up nutrition support teams

A
  • Dietitian
  • Doctor
  • Nurse
  • Pharmacist
  • (Chemical pathologist)
  • (Speech & Language Therapist)
  • (Micro / Infection control)
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7
Q

can you withdraw feeding

A
  • you can withdraw feeding as it is treatment
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8
Q

what are the indications for enteral tube feeding

A

• General debility – e.g slow postoperative recovery

• Reduced consciousness
– Brain injury- cannot eat

• Unsafe swallow
– CVA
– Parkinson’s disease
– Motor neurone disease

• Pre-head & neck cancer surgery/radiotherapy

• Special situations
– Cystic Fibrosis
– Crohn’s Disease

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9
Q

what are the things that you need to look at about the tube that you use for feeding

A

• Careful checking of tube position – initially - must never go into the lungs
• Careful checking – daily
• Tubes can become blocked
• Patient tolerance can be an issue
• Insertion facilitated by Xray or Endoscopy
• Nasojejunal tubes are possible
- the tube can be put further down the bowel if there is a problem with gastric emptying

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10
Q

what are the indications for gastrostomy

A
  • As for Enteral Feeding – but longer term
  • Percutaneous Endoscopic Gastrostomy (PEG)
  • Radiologically Inserted Gastrostomy (RIG)
  • Surgically placed Gastrostomy
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11
Q

what are the indications for parenteral nutrition

A
  • intestinal failure - patients usually have had surgery on the abdomen
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12
Q

what can cause intestinal failure

A
  • Prolonged postoperative ileus
  • Intestinal obstruction - ongoing
  • Short bowel
  • Small bowel fistula
  • Acute pancreatitis
  • GI motility disorders
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13
Q

what is acute pancreatitis

A
  • this is when the pancreas is inflamed
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14
Q

what are the principles of parenteral nutrition

A
  • Calculate nutrient need
  • Compound in a large IV bag
  • Usually central vein access
  • Pump infusion 24hrs (or less)
  • ASEPSIS
  • Monitor especially Water and Electrolytes
  • Stop when Enteral working
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15
Q

what are the complications of parenteral nutrition

A
  • Infection!!!!!
  • Water and electrolyte imbalance
  • Diabetes
  • Appetite suppression (or not )
  • Liver Disease – longer term – long term inflammatory liver disease, more at risk of quite a dangerous liver disease
  • Large vein thrombosis – longer term
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16
Q

what are not indications for parenteral nutrition

A
  • Routinely before major (GI) surgery
  • Routinely after major (GI) surgery
  • (Acute pancreatitis – consider NJ feeding – don’t know yet)
17
Q

what are the types of intestinal failure

A

type 1
type 2
type 3

18
Q

describe the three types of intestinal failure

A
  • Type 1 – short term usually after abdominal surgery, lasts a few days post -operative ileus
  • Type 2 – greater than 28 days, major postoperative complications, for example an enterocutaneous fistula
  • Type 3 – permeant IV feeding – short bowel, damaged bowel, GI motility disorders – in the UK about 2000 patients receiving permeant IV feeding
19
Q

how much does home parenteral nutrition cost

A

£30K-60K

20
Q

what is the problem with nutritional support

A
•	Eating.
–	 palatability
•	NG
–	aspiration, discomfort, diarrhoea
•	PEG
–	peritonitis, infection, discomfort, diarrhoea
•	PN
–	Infection
–	hyperglycaemia
–	electrolyte disturbances
–	hepatic dysfunction
–	thrombosis
21
Q

there is not distinction between ….

A

• No distinction between withholding and withdrawing artificial nutrition

22
Q

what are deemed medical treatments

A

• ETF and PN are deemed medical treatments, NOT basic care

23
Q

describe the law around artificial hydration

A
  • good practice suggests decisions regarding artificial hydration should involve a multi-professional team, the patient, and relatives and carers
  • a competent patient has the right to refuse artificial hydration, even if it may be considered of clinical benefit