part 8 Flashcards
1
Q
What is parenteral Nutrition?
A
nutrition via IV
highly concentrated and hypertonic
2
Q
What is TPN and where does it go?
A
total parenteral nutrition
- has to go into a central line
- highly concentrated and hypertonic
3
Q
What is PPN and how is it different from TPN?
A
peripheral parenteral nutrition (PPN)
-less concentrated and isotonic
4
Q
What component of TPN causes it to be costic to the veins?
A
dextrose
5
Q
What are some things we can do to prevent complications when giving parenteral nutrition?
A
- check glucose q4H because pt’s can become hyperglycemic/hypoglycemic
- watch labs/CBC for fluid, electrolyte, acid-base imbalances
6
Q
What are the goals of parenteral nutrition?
A
- meet caloric needs
- prevent protein/caloric malnutrition
- maintain/increase weight loss
- promote wound healing
- replace nutritional deficits
7
Q
What are some things to monitor when giving parenteral nutrition?
A
- use same catheter lumen for each feeding
- use electronic infusion device
- rate changes are incremental not drastic
- exp q4h
- monitor glucose
- aseptic technique
- change IV set q24h
- change dressing per protocol
- check connections
- daily weight and I&O
- assess serum protein and electrolytes