wk 2 5 Malnutrition COPY Flashcards

1
Q

define malnutrition

A

defiency, excess or imbalance of energy, protein and other nutrients

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2
Q

causes of malnutrition 4

A

decreased intake
impaired digestion/absorption increased nutritional requirements
increased nutrient losses

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3
Q

what can cause an increased loss of nutrients

A

vomiting
diarrhoea
stoma losses

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4
Q

explain malnutritions impact

A

increases likelihood of Gi dysfunction, infections and poor wound healing

occur acutely (sepsis,surgery,side effects) causing increased nutritional requirements

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5
Q

give some psychosocial causes of malnutrition

A
inappropriate food provision 
lack of assistance
lack of skill 
deprivation
depression
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6
Q

starvation has the opposite effect on the body than

A

injury

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7
Q

explain the effect starvation has on hormones

A

early smal incr catecholamines (noradrena,adrena,dopamine)
cortisol, GH then slow fall

insulin decreased

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8
Q

difference in weight loss observed in starvation and injryq

A

starve - slow loss, fat stores

injury -rapid loss, 80% fat, 20%protein

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9
Q

effects of malnutrition (9)

A
impaired immune
impaired wound healing 
reduced muscle strength
reduced resp muscle strength
inactivity
water/electrolyte disturbances
impaired thermoregulation 
menstrual irregularities 
impaired psycho-social function
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10
Q

menstrual irregularities due to malnutrition may lead to 2

A

infertility

osteoporosis

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11
Q

nutritional assessment

A

mid-arm muscle circumference

grip strength

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12
Q

albumin is a baseline investigation, why

A

makes up half protein in plasma, low levels suggest reduced AA synthesis/ abdominoretiroerineal resection (APR) , non-specific marker of illness

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13
Q

parameter used to check if their is protein restriction, 3 sources of causation

A

transferrin
APR
iron deficiency
liver disease

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14
Q

t/f prealbumin is increased in uraemia and dehydration

and decreased in APR

A

true

decreased in fasting too

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15
Q

when would prealbumin *transthyretin) be checked

A

monitoring patients response to nutritional support

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16
Q

retinol binding protein reflects dietary intake, and affected more by energy than protein restriction. When is it increased/decreased

A

incr - alcoholism, incr glomerular filtration

dec - chronic liver disorders, VitA/zinc defiency

17
Q

which parameter reflects muscle mass if renal function is normal.

A

urinary creatinine

18
Q

which parameter is reduced in malnutrition, liver and renal failure, and requires multiple measures to assess status

A

IGF1

19
Q

nutritional support given if 4

A

bmi <18.5
unintentional weight loss >10% in last 6months
(if BMI ,20, unintentional = 5%)
reduced recent consumption
poor absorptive capacity/nutritional loss

20
Q

contra-indications of ETF

A

lower GI obstruction (gut may work but cannot pass)
prolonged intestinal ileus (food build up)
high enterocutaneous fistula
intestinal ischaemia

21
Q

when is parenteral nutrition used

A

if patient:
inadequate oral/enteral intake
GI tract inaccessible