Whats New in ICU Nutrition - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 49
About This Presentation
Title:

Whats New in ICU Nutrition

Description:

do not let your patients starve and when you offer them nutrition support, do so ... Insertion: theatre, bedside, radiology, endoscopy ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:65
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 50
Provided by: weeweb
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Whats New in ICU Nutrition


1
Whats New in ICU Nutrition?
2
A slender and restricted diet is always
dangerous in chronic and in acute diseases
  • Hippocrates 400 B.C.

3
  • do not let your patients starve and when you
    offer them nutrition support, do so by the
    safest, simplest, most effective route.
  • Dr Mike Stroud Feb 2006
  • Chair of NICE committee

4
ICU Beginnings
5
ICU Nutrition development
  • 1970s TPN - separate CH, AAs and Lipids
  • Single lumen C/Lines, no pumps
  • 2500-3000kcals/day Lactic acidosis, high glucose
    loads, fatty livers, high insulin reqt
  • 1980s Scientific studies of metabolism
    recognition of overfeeding, excess nitrogen
  • 1990s nitrogen limitation 0.2g/kg/24hr, start
    of immuno-nutrition trials
  • 2000s glucose control, specific nutrients

6
Metabolic Responses in Severe illness
  • Aims to mobilize substrate (amino acids and fatty
    acids) from body stores to support vital organs
    catabolism -
  • Protein redistribution from skeletal muscle to
    support the central viscera wasting
  • Aims to enhance resistance to infection
    inflammatory cascade

7
Metabolic Demands and Response in Severe Illness
  • Extreme physiological stress/organ failure
  • Increased oxygen requirements
  • High body temperature
  • Acute phase response cytokines
  • Sympathetic nervous system stimulation
  • Immuno-suppression
  • Insulin resistance hyperglycaemia
  • Impaired gut function

8
Starvation
  • Bobby Sands lost 7 kg in first 17 days
  • Died at 65 days (9 weeks)
  • Not expending excess energy, not in ICU
  • Weight loss approx 0.3kg/day after first week
    depending on activity/health
  • Loss of muscle and fat
  • Eventual death from slowing of all metabolic
    processes

9
Metabolic response to starvation
  • Aims to minimize impact on vital organs and
    conserve energy
  • Decreased metabolic rate
  • Decreased temperature
  • Reduction in physical activity
  • ICU patients often have starvation AND
    increased metabolic demands
  • Complex metabolic and inflammatory processes
  •  

10
Consequences of malnutrition
  • Increased morbidity and mortality
  • Prolonged hospital stay
  • Impaired tissue function and wound healing
  • Defective muscle function, reduced respiratory
    and cardiac function
  • Prolonged weaning from ventilation
  • Immuno-suppression, increased risk of infection
  • Depression, lethargy

11
Scale of the problem
  • McWhirter and Pennington 1994
  • gt40 of hospital patients malnourished on
    admission
  • Recent Scottish data 35
  • Estimated cost to hospitals 3.8bn/yr
  • Many ICU patients malnourished or at risk on ICU
    admission

12
The Downward Spiral of Malnutrition in ICU
Morbidity / Mortality
13
SICS Nutrition Network
  • Set up in June 2006
  • Links dietitians, pharmacists, ICU nurses,
    physios and doctors. Meets 3x/year
  • Forum for sharing ideas
  • Current projects on assessment/weighing
  • Guidelines on practical issues
  • Website with protocols/guidelines/teaching
  • Educational meetings
  • Encouraging projects in nutrition

14
National Initiatives
  • QIS Standards
  • MUST (BAPEN)
  • NICE guidelines on Hospital Nutrition
  • Charge Nurse Review

15
What are we good at?
  • Feeding within 48 hours
  • Reminding the surgeons about it
  • Putting tubes in
  • Giving TPN
  • Looking after lines

16
What are we less good at?
  • Nutritional screening
  • Weighing patients
  • Keeping tubes in
  • Maintaining NG intake
  • NJ feeding practical issues
  • Treating complications
  • Identifying refeeding risk or syndrome
  • Feeding in HDU

17
Nutritional State
18
Nutritional Assessment
  • Various nutritional screening tools
  • None very good for ICU
  • Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool from the
    Malnutrition Advisory Group of BAPEN
  • Uses BMI, weight loss, acute illness/intake
  • Low risk-routine care, Medium - observe High
    risk treat- refer to dietitian/local protocols

19
Screening in ICU
  • MUST not very helpful in guiding decisions
  • Almost all patients require artificial nutrition-
    cannot observe
  • What about refeeding syndrome?
  • Needs adaptation using NICE Guidelines
  • Adapted MUST for ICU Uses BMI/weight loss/food
    intake refeeding risk assessment linked to
    feeding flowchart

20
SNACC
  • 1. Pilot study of Fife ICU screening tool 08
  • 2. Systematic review of nutritional assessment in
    critical care 09
  • 3. Large study of screening tool in Scotland to
    compare it with other screens and look at outcome
    data results may be useful to target
    interventions 2010-11

21
Weighing Patients
  • Craig Hurnauth ICU S/N at SJH
  • Audit of 13/14 NHS trusts in Scotland
  • 12 trusts do not weigh patients in ICU on
    admission use estimate/notes/family
  • 1 weighs every day with hoist weekly
  • 5 use MUST
  • 7 do not screen, 1 adapted screening tool
  • 7 units in England similar results

22
Weighing Patients
  • Important for nutrition screening
  • Drug dosages
  • Cardiac output monitoring LIDCO, PAFC, PICCO
  • Fluid balance

23
Weighing Patients
  • Estimation of weight can be up to 20 out
  • i.e. 80 kg instead of 100kg and vice versa
  • Estimation of height also inaccurate but
    measuring height with tape fairly accurate
  • We need to weigh patients in ICU and measure
    height

24
Methods of Weighing
  • Hoist time consuming, needs several nurses,
    risky for unstable patients or trauma patients
  • Weigh beds 16000 each
  • Digital bed scales scales for each wheel of
    the bed weighs bed patient, mobile, minimal
    manpower, no disruption to patient

25
Methods of Weighing
  • Progress since audit
  • 2 units have bought weigh beds
  • 5 are considering bed scales

26
Keeping tubes in
  • Sedation
  • Stitching
  • Posey Mitts
  • Nasal Bridles

27
Maintaining NG intake
  • Follow a protocol
  • Gastric residuals do not stop or reduce feed
    until you have 3 residuals of gt250mls (check
    clinical signs) 400mls may be ok
  • Starting and stopping feed
  • Extubations, fasting for theatre, scans, minor
    procedures
  • Can catch up on feed that is missed
  • Keep 10mls/hr if possible gut protection

28
NJ feed patient use per year
29
NJ feeding
  • Bypasses the stomach
  • Good for high residuals gastroparesis
  • High anastomoses
  • Nervous surgeon syndrome
  • Insertion theatre, bedside, radiology, endoscopy
  • May reduce aspiration, will increase feed given
    in selected patients

30
Complications
  • Ileus trickle of feed may be beneficial
  • Avoid opioids, optimise fluid balance and
    electrolytes, consider Neostigmine
  • Constipation treat with appropriate drugs
  • Diarrhoea exclude infections, optimise fluid
    balance and electrolytes, replace loss
  • ??fibre feeds
  • Intolerance ? Sepsis, prokinetics, NJ feeding,
    avoid opioids
  • Line sepsis - SPSP

31
Overfeeding
  • Lactic acidosis
  • Hyperglycaemia
  • Increased infections
  • Liver impairment (Alk phos, ALT, GGT, acalculous
    cholecystitis)
  • Persistent pyrexia
  • Exact requirements calculated by dietitians
    (generally less than in the fit)
  • 25kcal/kg/24hours rough guide, 10 in refeeding
    risk

32
Refeeding Syndrome
  • Prisoners of war 1944-5, 1944 conscientious
    objectors in USA studied
  • Starvation early use of glycogen stores for
    amino acids - gluconeogenesis
  • 72 hrs fatty acid oxidation use of fatty acids
    and ketones for energy source, low insulin levels
  • Atrophy of organs, reduced lean body mass

33
Refeeding syndrome
  • Carbohydrate feeding shift to CH metabolism
  • Insulin release
  • Phosphate and potassium shift into cells.
  • Magnesium, potassium and phosphate drop
  • May get Lactic acidosis
  • Sodium and water shift out of cells oedema
  • Insulin causes sodium retention
  • Protein synthesis needs potassium and phosphate
    - these drop more
  • Thiamine deficiency occurs (co-factor in CH
    metabolism) encephalopathy, weakness

34
Refeeding Syndrome in ICU
  • Unlikely to be a clear diagnosis
  • Many effects oedema, arrhythmias, pulmonary
    oedema, cardiac decompensation, respiratory
    weakness, fits, hypotension, leukocyte
    dysfunction, diarrhoea, coma, rhabdomyolysis,
    sudden death
  • Screen nutritional history and electrolytes
  • Remember in HDU patients/malnourished ward
    patients
  • Poor awareness among doctors!

35
Risk of re-feeding syndrome
  • Two or more of the following
  • BMI less than 18.5 kg/m2 (lt16)
  • unintentional weight loss greater than 10 within
    the last 3-6 months (gt15)
  • little or no nutritional intake for more than 5
    days (gt10)
  • Hx alcohol abuse or drugs including insulin,
    chemotherapy, antacids or diuretics
  • (Critically low levels of PO42-, K and Mg2)

36
Managing refeeding problems
  • provide Thiamine (Pabrinex)/multivitamin/trace
    element supplementation
  • start nutrition support at 10 kcal/kg/day
  • increase levels slowly
  • restore circulatory volume
  • monitor fluid balance and clinical status
  • replace phosphate, magnesium and K
  • Reduce feeding rate if problems arise

NICE Guidelines for Nutrition Support in Adults
2006
37
Intake in HDU
38
Feeding in HDU
39
ACTION
  • Establish guidelines for feeding
  • Identify high-risk patients/refeeding risk
  • Aim for oral/NG supplementation in these patients
  • Aim to improve fluid administration
  • ERAS/Pre-op supplements
  • Monitoring of calorific requirements/intake
  • Dietitian follow-up to wards

40
Immuno-nutrition
  • The immune system a complex and interactive
    biological system that coordinates the detection,
    destruction and elimination of any foreign
    material or organism entering the body.
  • Oxidants cytokines, NFkB, genes, inflamn
  • Nutrients glutamine, FFAs, protein
  • Glutathione oxidant defence
  • Anti-inflammatory molecules

41
THE ICU GAMBLEHow to tip the scales?
LIFE
DISABILITY
Inflammation and resolution
Inflammation, organ failure
DEATH
42
Critical Illness
  • Small reductions in mortality over years
  • Increasing problems with infection
  • Advances in treatment have limited effects
  • Patho-physiology complex
  • The future replacement of the bodys own stress
    substrates
  • Disease-modulating nutrients
  • Reduce oxidant and metabolic stress
  • Favourably modulate immune response

43
Glutamine
  • Amino acid essential in sepsis/major trauma
  • Levels drop after injury, exercise and stress.
    Very low in critical illness first 72 hours
  • Vital to gut, immune cells, and kidney
  • Serves as metabolic fuel precursor to DNA
    synthesis, decreases inflammation
  • Glutamine deficiency at onset of critical
    illness/sepsis correlated with increased
    mortality
  • Studies in burns/trauma show improvement
  • Big studies in all ICU patients awaited

44
PROBIOTICS
  • live micro-organisms which when administered in
    adequate amounts confer a health benefit on the
    host

45
Probiotics
  • Critical illness causes virulence of gut
    bacteria treatment worsens gut function
  • Probiotics inhibit growth of pathogenic enteric
    bacteria, eliminate pathogenic toxins
  • block epithelial invasion by pathogens
  • enhance T-cell and macrophage function
  • Potential to cut VAP and C. diff
  • BUT safety concerns dose, type,storage
  • unforeseen effects more research needed

46
Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids
Omega-6 ?-Linoleic acid (GLA) borage oil
Arachidonic Acid precursor Omega-3 Fish oils
Eicosapentanoic acid (EPA) and Docosahexanoic
acid (DHA)
47
Dietary Lipids
  • Ratios in paleolithic diet ?6?-3 11
  • Current Western diet 161
  • Current UK PN Soybean oil base 71
  • New PN (SMOF) 2.51
  • Cell membrane composition depends on balance
  • AA, DHA and EPA are present in inflammatory cell
    membrane phospholipids
  • Increased ?-3 levels reduce the inflammatory
    response in various ways gene expression, cell
    activity, adhesion molecules, cytokines

48
Antioxidants
  • Oxidative stress in critically ill patients
    contributes to organ damage / malignant
    inflammation (free radicals, mitochondrial
    damage)
  • Glutathione, Vitamins A, C and E
  • Zinc, copper, manganese, iron, selenium
  • Already added to feeds
  • Should we give extra?
  • Results of SIGNET and REDOXs awaited

49
What is the evidence in ICU?
  • Early enteral feeding is best
  • Hyper/hypoglycaemia/overfeeding are bad
  • Starvation and refeeding are bad
  • Nutritional deficit a/w worse outcome
  • EN a/w aspiration and VAP
  • PN if cant have EN soon if malnourished
  • Combination can be used to achieve goals
  • Protocols improve delivery of feed
  • Some nutrients show promising results
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com