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Protein Calorie Malnutrition . Protein-Calorie Malnutrition . PCM affects ~ 1 billion individuals world-wide In US, 30-50% of patients will be malnourished at admission to hospital 69% will have a decline in nutrition status during hospitalization
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Protein-Calorie Malnutrition • PCM affects ~ 1 billion individuals world-wide • In US, 30-50% of patients will be malnourished at admission to hospital • 69% will have a decline in nutrition status during hospitalization • 25-30% will become malnourished during hospitalization
Malnutrition in Hospitalized Pts • Consequences for hospitalized pts: • poor wound healing • higher rate of infections • greater length of stay • greater costs • Increased morbidity and mortality
Definitions • Fast: exclusion of all food energy • Starvation: prolonged inadequate intake of protein and/or energy • Cachexia: wasting induced by metabolic stress
Brief Review of Fed State • Exogenous fuel utilization • Absorption of glucose and amino acids stimulates insulin secretion • Deposition of nutrients in tissue • Glucose: glycogen, triglyceride synthesis • Amino Acids: protein synthesis, mainly in muscle
Fuels in Fed State • Glucose-dependent: brain, blood cells and renal medulla • Brain uses 50% of available glucose • Preferential users of glucose: heart, renal cortex and skeletal muscle • Fatty acids: liver • Protein/AA: not used as fuels unless excessive intake
Postabsorptive State • Fed state ends when last nutrient is absorbed, body switches to endogenous fuel utilization • Decrease level of insulin, increase in glucagon • Release, transfer and oxidation of fatty acids • Release of glucose from liver glycogen • Release of free amino acids from muscle as a source of fuel
Progression of Fasting • Normal post-absorptive state: 12 hours • Draw on short term reserves to maintain blood glucose levels for glucose-dependent tissues (brain, blood cells, and renal medulla) • release and oxidation of fatty acids • release of glucose from liver glycogen • Liver glycogen capacity: approximately 1000 kcal • Equivalent to 250g carbohydrate/glucose
Fast Longer than 24 hours • Further decrease in insulin, increase in glucagon • Proteolysis and release of amino acids from muscle as a source of fuel • Activation of hormone sensitive lipase • increase in lipolysis • increase in circulating FFA and TG • Gluconeogenesis increases
Gluconeogenesis • Cori cycle in Liver • glucose --> converted to lactate/pyruvate in skeletal muscle (anaerobic)-->travels back to liver for conversion to glucose
Gluconeogenesis • Glucose-Alanine Cycle: Liver • AA deaminated in muscle • C-skeleton used for energy -->pyruvate and NH2 --> alanine • alanine returns to liver for deamination • NH2 -->urea for excretion • pyruvate --> glucose via GNG
Gluconeogenesis • Glutamine cycle in Kidney • Muscle glutamine --> kidney --> glutamate + NH3 -->a-ketoglutarate --> glucose • Kidney is initially a minor source, over time increases to supply up to 50% of glucose
Fast longer than 2-3 days • GNG ongoing, sources of substrate: • endogenous glycerol • alanine and glutamine from muscle • lactate and pyruvate • Ketosis
Fast longer than 2-3 days • Ketosis • characterized by presence of ketone bodies • acetoacetate, acetone, b-hydroxybutyrate • byproduct of fatty acid oxidation in liver • can be used by all tissues with mitochondria • utilized by brain, decreasing glucose consumption by 25% • Can be prevented by providing 150g glucose per day
Fast longer than 2-3 days • Significant protein loss during first 7-10 days • Body protein losses: • 10-12 g urinary N/day • 360 g LBM per day initially • 1-2 kg LBM over first 7 days • Lethal depletion after 3 weeks if no adaptation occurs - by the end of 2-3 weeks, decrease muscle protein catabolism to <1/3 of initial (not yet understood)
Long Term Starvation (>7-10d) • Decreased metabolic rate • decreased activity, body temperature • Conservation of protein • decrease in muscle pro breakdown from 75g to 20 g per day • Increased fatty acid oxidation • Liver, heart and muscle use ketone bodies
Long Term Starvation (>7-10d) • Decreased glucose availability • Brain: • fed state: uses 75% (140g/day), completely oxidized • >3 week of fast: replace 50% of glucose with ketones • decreased complete oxidation, recycles via GNG • Blood cells/Renal medulla • anaerobic glycolysis to pyruvate and lactate
Origin of blood glucose: (I) Exogenous; (II) Glycogen, Liver gluconeogenesis; (III) Liver gluconeogenesis, Glycogen; (IV & V)Liver and Kidney gluconeogenesis Major fuel of brain: (I) - (III) Glucose; (IV) Glucose, ketone bodies; (V) Ketone bodies, glucose
Minnesota study (1944-1946) • 32 young, healthy “volunteers” consumed 2/3 of normal energy intake (1600 kcal) for 24 weeks • wt loss of 23% of body weight • loss of 70% of fat mass • loss of 24% of lean body mass • wt loss alone underestimated loss of body mass due to increase in edema
Minnesota study (1944-1946) • Decrease in metabolic rate by 40% • corresponds to decreased in food energy • correlates to loss of lean body mass • reduced per unit of remaining LBM • lower thermal effect of food due to smaller meals • decrease in physical activity • achieve new “energy balance”
Starvation • Functional alterations • hormonal changes • decreased thyroid fx --> decreased BMR • decreased gonadotropins • decreased somatomedins --> decreased muscle/cartilage synthesis, decreased growth • decreased metabolic rate and caloric need • decreased body temp • decreased activity, increased sleep
Starvation • Changes in Organ Function • GI tract - loss of mass, decreased villi and crypts • decreased enzyme secretion • impaired motility • tendency for bacterial overgrowth • maldigestion and malabsorption
Starvation • Changes in Organ Function • Liver: loss of mass • decreased protein synthesis • periportal fat accumulation (fatty liver) • hepatic insufficiency • Skeletal muscle • catabolized for GNG - decreased mass • utilization of ketones: slower contractions • diminished function: intercostal muscles - decreased respiratory function
Starvation • Changes in Organ Function • Cardiovascular system • decreased cardiac output • bradycardia, hypotension • dilatation, degeneration, fibrosis • central circulation takes precedence, leads to postural hypotension • Respiratory system: • decreased cilia, reduced bacterial clearance • decreased deep breathing
Starvation • Changes in Organ Function • Kidney • decreased perfusion, decreased GFR • increased GNG • increased NH4 excretion • Immune function • decreased T-lymphocyte count • decreased cytokine activity • anergy • increased infection rate (pneumonia)
Starvation • Changes in Organ Function • Nervous system: • decrease in nerve myelination • decrease brain growth
Successful Adaptation • Goals: 1.Maintain glucose homeostasis and conserve glucose pool. 2. Preserve structural and functional lipids and proteins 3. Preserve the organism Preferential visceral uptake of AA released by peripheral tissue
Failed adaptation • Metabolic disease: hyperthyroidism/thyroid storm, insulinoma • Micronutrient deficiency - mineral deficiency interferes with protein sparing • Food restriction too severe • Metabolic stressors such as infection, surgery lead to “hypermetabolic state”
Hypermetabolic State and Cachexia • Wounds, surgical stress, cancer, inflammatory conditions and infection • Increased production of cortisol, interleukins, TNF • hypercatabolic state with increased RMR = increased energy requirements • Insulin resistance, hyperglycemia - no starvation adaptation, poor utilization of stubstrate • Protein breakdown continues unabated • In some burn patients amount of protein catabolized can reach 200 g/d = ~0.5 lb/day lean body mass! • Severe protein malnutrition results in as little as 1 week. • Repletion of body stores is not achievable until metabolic stressor has been resolved
PCM: Clues to Cause From Body Composition Analysis • Energy depletion (reduced fat stores) out of proportion to LBM loss: Starvation = Marasmus • Predominant protein depletion (reduced LBM): Cachexia = Kwashiorkor • Combined (Marasmic Kwashiorkor): Most common PCM seen in hospitalized patients
Temporal wasting PCM – Marasmus in Hospitalized Patients Severe Energy Depletion: Temporal wasting observed with ageing and reduced intake
PCM – Marasmus in Hospitalized Patients Severe Energy Depletion: Loss of Skinfold Thickness
Nutrition AssessmentHospital or Clinic Screening • Identifying and treating malnutrition • Preventing Hospital-Acquired Malnutrition • Assessing nutrition risk on admission: JCAHO-mandated database • more to come...