week 8 enternal nutrition tubes and pumps Flashcards

1
Q

indications for enternal nutrition

or reason on why you give tubes

A

facial and jaw injury
head and neck cancers
swallowing disorders
hypermetabolic conditions- where the pt may need more calories
major burns, trauma, sepsis, post-op recovery

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2
Q

contraindications to tube feeding

or why you should not use the tubes

A
intractable vomiting
intestinal obstruction
upper GI bleeding
Severe, acute pancreatitis (pancreas has to secrete digestive enzyme/ insulin)
Expected need less than 5-10 days
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3
Q

Short term enternal routes

A

nasogastric, nasoduodenal, nasojejunal

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4
Q

long term enternal routes

A

G tubes, J tubes (both are PEG tubes)

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5
Q

With nasally inserted tube size. How to choose the size

A

size depends on the viscosity of the formula
select the smallest size possible
generally 8 french will do for commercial formulas
10-14 french will work for home blenderized foods
16 is the biggest tube

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6
Q

With nasally inserted tube length. How to choose the length

A

length will depend on the placement
30 inch for NG
45 inch for ND and NJ
How far you go in depends on how far you want to end up

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7
Q

NG tube indications

A

intact gag reflux
no esophageal reflux
normal gasstric emptying
stomach not invlolved with a primary disease (stomach cancer

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8
Q

NG tube advantages

A

easy insertion

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9
Q

NG tube disadvantages

A

high risk of pulmonary aspiration

patient may be self conscious r/t appearance of tube

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10
Q

NJ tube indications

A

Gastoparesis or imparies gastric emptying
esophageal reflux
gastric dysfunction due to trauma or surgery

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11
Q

NJ advantages

A

can initiate immeditely after injury

reduced risk of aspiration

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12
Q

NJ disadvantages

A

intolerance may need endoscopic placement

patient sel cons., tube may become displaced

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13
Q

ND tube indications

A

gastoparesis or impaires gastric emptying

esophageal reflux

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14
Q

ND advantages

A

reduced risk of pulmonary aspiration

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15
Q

ND disadvantages

A
GI intolerance (bloating, Diarrhea)
may require endoscopic placement
patient self consc
tube may displace into the stomach
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16
Q

G tube indications

A
long term feeding, sotmach empties normally
swallowing dysfunction
NG route not available
Gag refux intact
no esophageal reflux
stoamch not involved in primary disease
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17
Q

G tubes advantages

A

can be palced endoscopically (no surgery)
less costly
tube is large bore-less clogging
larger reservoir capacity in stomach

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18
Q

G tube disadvantages

A

risk for aspirations
stoma care, infection around stoma
potential for skin excoriation from leakage of digestive secretions

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19
Q

J tube indications

A
stomach is somehow not working
long term feedin
high risk of aspiration
esophageal reflux
inability to access the upper GI tract
impaired gastric emptying
gastric dysfucntion due to trauma or surgery
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20
Q

J tube advantage

A

reduced risk of aspiration
no surger required
less costly
con be placed immediately after injury

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21
Q

J tube disadvantages

A

possible intolerance to feedin
stoma care
skin excoration
tube occlusion r/t small bore size

22
Q

how do you check tube placement

A

x-ray is the most reliable way to check the tube
aspiration of the gastric content
testing PH level of the contents
injecting air into the tube and listen over the stoamch and hear a gurgling sound. Lack scientif support. Placement done at least once a shift and prior to feeding always x2 methods

23
Q

how do you monitor residual

A

using a syringe to withdraw and measure how much formula is left in the stomach prior ro starting the next feeding
residual is subtracted from the next feeding
it is then returned to the stomach

24
Q

when do you stop the feeding

A

when the complains of pain or nausea - call physican

25
Q

what do you do with water during tube feeding

A

rinse the tube with at least 30 mL water after each bolus
extra water may be ordered
continous feeding are usually run at 80-150 ml/hr

26
Q

what are the medication that can and cannot be given in tube feedings

A

Oral meds that can be crushed can be given by
the feeding tube using a cath tipped syringe.

extended release/ temy coated medication should not be crushed

27
Q

Tubing and bag must be changed

A

every 24 hours

28
Q

Hang no more than

A

6 hours of feeding at a

time to prevent contamination

29
Q

when Selecting Formula

• Based on patient need

A

How well the GI tract is working
– How much capacity the GI tract has
– Underlying disease processes
– Patient tolerance

30
Q

ways to administer feedings? by?

A

Bolus
• Intermittent
• Continuous

By gravity
• By pump

31
Q

Bolus feedings are for

A

Non-critical patient
– Home tube feedings
– Rehab patients

32
Q

bolus feedings advantages

A

Easy, inexpensive, short (15 minutes or less)

33
Q

bolus feedings disadvantages

A

Risk of aspiration is high, N/V, abdominal pain,

distension and diarrhea.

34
Q

intermittent feedings are for

A
Non-critical patients
– Home tube feedings
– Rehab patients
May require formulas with more calories and
protein.
35
Q

intermittent feeding advantages

A

Flexible feeding schedule, inexpensive, short

36
Q

intermittent feeding disadvantages

A

Risk of aspiration, N/V/D, bloating and abd.

pain.

37
Q

continuous feedings are for

A

– Critically ill patients
– Usually fed into the small bowel
– Can be used for patients with intolerance to
intermittent or bolus feedings

38
Q

continuous feedings advantages

A

Pump assisted
• Placement of the tube minimizes risk of
aspiration.

39
Q

continuous feedings disadvantages

A

Minimizes patient movement
• Infusion is 24 hours a day
• Increased cost r/t pump and tubing change
every 24 hours

40
Q

if formula is isotonic

A

do not dilute it

41
Q

If feeding is diluted

A

do not advance the

concentration and the rate at the same time.

42
Q

How do you decide if the patient is tolerating

the tub feeding?

A

Check gastric residuals
– Diarrhea or constipation
– Nausea or abdominal pain
– Bloating or excess gas production

43
Q

Clogging is more likely with

A

protein products and thicker solutions.

44
Q

Most clogs can be prevented by

A

flushing and
assuring medications are crushed well and
dissolved.

45
Q

To unclog a tube

A

Warm water and slight manual pressure
– Parcrelipase and sodium bicarb solution to “digest”
the clog.
– Tube “roto router”

46
Q

Formula is administered at

A

room temp

47
Q

Head of bed should always be at least

A

30 degrees when administering a tube feeding.

48
Q

milky colored solution is

A

fats and lipids

49
Q

Who needs TPN or PPN?

A
Debilitated and malnourished with weight loss
of 10% or more.
– Short bowel syndrome
– Inflammatory bowel syndrome
– Hypermetabolic states
• Patients who have high energy and protein needs
– Burn victims
– Cancer patients
– Multiple trauma
– Large open wounds
50
Q

TPN

A
Satisfies all body
requirements
• Can be short or long term
• Must be administered by a
central venous access
device
– Example – subclavian IV route
51
Q

PPN

A
Used for short tem or
supplemental support
• Can be given peripherally
• Requires adequate venous
access
– Example – PICC line