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Metabolic and Nutritional Support of the Trauma Patient. Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics. Historical Prospective (Metabolic and Nutritional Support). “Starve a fever, feed a cold” 300 BC ,100 AD - Aristotle, Galen -” vital heat “
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Metabolic and Nutritional Support of the Trauma Patient Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics
Historical Prospective(Metabolic and Nutritional Support) • “Starve a fever, feed a cold” • 300 BC ,100 AD - Aristotle, Galen -” vital heat “ • 1600’s Harvey, Van Helmont - heat related to circulation, heat is lost due to death • 1920’s Cuthbertson - hypermetabolic response to injury
Metabolic response to injury The metabolic responses to critical illness /trauma evolve over time Metabolic needs reflexed the phase of the injury response Phases of the injury response : ebb,flow, convalescence
Ebb phase: • 24 - 48 hrs • fluid retention • elevated counter Regulator hormones • glycogenolysis, Lipolysis
EBB phase • Decrease cardiac output • Decrease oxygen consumption • Decrease temperature • Increase blood sugar, lactate levels, normal to low Insulin levels
Flow phase: • - Post ebb ,variable time course • Hypermetabolic • muscle catabolism • Hyperglycemia • Elevated Free fatty acids
Flow phase • Increase cardiac output • Increase body temperature • Increase 02 consumption • Increase blood sugar, Insulin
Convalescence / Recovery Phase: • weeks to months • anabolic • decrease in total body edema, • return of GI function • weight gain
Metabolic Response to Injury • Substrate mobilization: • mixed fuel of glucose,protein and Lipid. • Glucose via glycogen then hepatic and renal gluconeogenesis. (lactate, glycerol, alanine). • Protein from peripheral stores to provide alanine and substrates for hepatic acute phase proteins. • Lipid mobilized from peripheral stores via lipolysis to generate free fatty acids and glycerol.
Neuroendocrine Response to Injury Counter Regulatory hormones Glucagon Epinephrine Norepinephrine Growth hormone Cortisol
Cytokine Cascade • Releases from multiple cell types after injury or infection. • TNF IL-1 and IL-6. • IL-1 > TNF, IL-6 stimulate pituitary - adrenal axis. • Glucocorticoids inhibit cytokine release, reduces cytokine MRNA.
Neuroendocrine/Cytokine Response to Injury • Stimuli • Hemorrhage, ECF loss • Hypoxemia • Pain/anxiety • Change in temperature • Change in substrate availability • Tissue injury
Injury/Stress : Carbohydrate metabolism • glycogenolysis • gluconeogenesis • increase liver production and peripheral uptake • insulin residence • hyperglycemia
Carbohydrate Metabolism in stress HORMONES: counter - regulatory Glucagon, epinephrine, norepinephrine cortisol - counter act hypoglycemia Epinephrine - glycogenolysis, gluconeogenesis glucagon Glucagon - liver production of glucose, dose not effect clearance Insulin - production from B cells, resistance Postreceptor Cortisol potentiates other hormones effects glucose,AA and Fatty acid metabolism
Carbohydrate Metabolism in Stress Cytokines: TNF - hepatic glucose productions, glucose uptake in peripheral tissue IL - 1 - plasma glucose - hepatic production peripheral glucose transport
Injury/stress : Protein metabolism • Protein catabolism • Protein synthesis is up, but the net rate of brake down is greater. • AA mobilized from skeletal muscle to fuel wound healing , the cellular inflammatory response and acute phase protein production, AA oxidized for fuel • Protein catabolism poorly suppressed by exogenous fuels
Protein Metabolism in stress Hormones - muscle counter regulatory hormones increase muscle protein brake down Cortisol,glucagon and catecholamines - muscle breakdown GH/IGF-1 - levels in stress anabolic Insulin - inhibits protein break down
Protein metabolism in Stress Hormones - liver • epinephrine - APP, AA transport • glucagon - APP, AA transport • cortisol - AA, enhance other hormone,cytokine effects • GH - AA transport
Protein Metabolism in Stress • CYTOKINES: • TNF, IL-I - increase protein breakdown in muscle, may inhabit effects of IGF - 1 • IL-6 - APP production as do IL-I, TNF,IFN • Cytokines and hormones interact to effect protein synthesis in the liver and protein breakdown in muscle
Injury/Stress : Lipid metabolism • Increases fat metabolism ,increased serum FFA,Triglycerides • clearance of triglycerides, lipoprotein lipase activity • Lipolysis • Synthesis of liver Apolipoproteins and triglycerides - denovo + recycled FFA
Lipid Metabolism in stress • HORMONES: • Effect of counter regulator hormones on lipid metabolism unclear • Epinephrine Lipolysis in adipose tissue • Glucagon - FA synthesis in the liver • Cortisol - FA synthesis in adipose tissue does not effect liver FA synthesis • Insulin - FA synthesis in hepatocyte
Lipid Metabolism in Stress Cytokines: TNF - serum triglycerides - hepatic FFA and triglyceride synthesis, Lipolysis in adipose tissue serum FFA; glycerol IL-1, IFN-’s - Lipolysis, Lipoprotein Lipase :effect many aspects of hepatic Fatty acid synthesis
Metabolic Response to Injury • Substrate mobilization: • mixed fuel of glucose,protein and Lipid. • Glucose via glycogen then hepatic and renal gluconeogenesis. (lactate, glycerol, alanine). • Protein from peripheral stores to provide alanine and substrates for hepatic acute phase proteins. • Lipid mobilized from peripheral stores via lipolysis to generate free fatty acids and glycerol.
Metabolic Response to Injury Ebb phase - fuel mobilization Flow phase - catabolic Convalescence - anabolic Counter Regulatory hormones Cytokines TNF,IL-1 and IL-6.
Nutritional Assessment • Who to feed ? • When and How to feed ? • What to feed ?
Nutritional Assessment • Who to feed ? • Only those patients who will benefit • Only those patients whose risks of complications from malnutrition are greater then the risks of nutritional interventions
Nutritional Assessment • Who to feed ? • Malnourished patients > 10% Wgt. Lose. • NPO > 5-7 days. • Patient expected to be NPO > 7-10 days.
Nutritional Support • How: • Use the gut. • It’s natural. • Protects the patient from the TPN Doctor.
Nutrient Composition • What to feed ? • How much energy ?
Hypermetabolism of Injury • Major surgery 10% > baseline. • Trauma 25% > baseline. • Large burn injury 100% > baseline.
Energy Requirements of Injury • Measured need : indirect calorimetry • E.E. = (3.94 x VO2 ) + (1.1 x VCO2 ) • Estimated energy needs: Harris-Benedict • men: EE= 66+(13.8xwgt) + (5xHt) -(6.8xage) • women: EE= 665+ (9.6xwgt) + (1.7xHt) - (4.7xAge) • 25kcal/Kg/day.
Indirect calorimetry Metaboliccart
Indirect Calorimetry Metabolic cart in critical illness • Resting energy expenditure of critically ill patients varies widely over the course of the day and over the course of an illness • Measurements from - 10 % to + 23 % of an “average” REE can be seen within a 24 hour period
Indirect Calorimetry Predicting REE Harris-Benedict is correct 80-90% of the time in healthy, normal volunteers. In 10-14% it over estimates EE In obese normal volunteers it predicts EE correctly in only 40-64% in critically ill patients the Harris-Benedict equation is correct only 50% of the time For most disease processes Harris -Benedict underestimates EE
Indirect Calorimetry Predicting REE Multipliers for various disease states attempt to improve the accuracy of the Harris-Benedict equation These multipliers tend to overestimate EE when compared to indirect calorimetry
Nutrient Composition - Energy • Complications of under feeding ? • Morbidity and mortality of malnutrition • Complications of over feeding? • Hyperglycemia, fatty liver , respiratory failure, immunosuppression,etc . • 25kcal/Kg/day will avoid over or under feeding of most critically ill patients.
Nutrient Composition • What ? • Protein. • Carbohydrate. • Fat.
Substrate Provision Protein: metabolic stress leads to; proteolysis of skeletal muscle,increased Hepatic synthesis of APP,increased use of AA for energy production. Net nitrogen lose • 1.5 gram/kg/day. • > 1.4 gram/kg/day leads to both an increase in protein synthesis and catabolism with no net gain for the patient. • Glutamine, Arginine.
Substrate Provision • Carbohydrates: • Glucose primary fuel for the injury response. • Injury/stress effect ability to oxidize glucose • Stable post-op patient maximum glucose oxidation rate 7mg/kg/min. • Stressed patient maximum glucose oxidation rate 5mg/kg/min.
Substrate Provision • Carbohydrates: • maximum glucose oxidation rate: 5mg/kg/min. • Avoid: over feeding, hyperglycemia (BS < 220 mg/dL).
PREVALENCE OF HYYPRGLECEMIA • IN TPN PATIENTS • 260 TPN patients screened, 102 low risk patients evaluated . 22 % ( 23/102) of low risk patients had BS > 200mg/dl • Glucose infusion:mg/Kg/min < 4 4.1 - 5 > 5 • Patients BS > 200 mg/dl 0 (0 %) 5 (11 %) 18 (50 %) • Patients BS < 200 mg/dl 18 41 19 • Rosemarin DK, et al, Nutri. Clin Pract, 1996;11:151-6
Substrate Provision • Carbohydrates: • maximum glucose oxidation rate: 5mg/kg/min.
Substrate Provision- lipid Lipid: Fat metabolism is increased in stress, increased lipolysis, increased fatty acid oxidation, increased production and release from the liver . Lipid administration prevents essential fatty acid deficiency ,spares protein. Lipid administration has cardiopulmonary and immunologic effects
Substrate Provision • Lipids: • Provide EFA’s. • Provide calories that avoid hyperglycemia. • Mixed fuel may enhance protein sparing. • Cardiovascular effects. • Immunologic effects. • giving lipid in low concentrations and slowly <0.1 gr/kg/hr of iv lipid
Substrate Provision • Lipids: • Cardiopulmonary effects. Alterations in diffusion,shunting and oxygenation • Immunologic effects. Overload REE system,impair neutrophil chemotaxis, modulate eicosanoid production • Effects can be modulated by : choice of lipid; giving lipid in low concentrations and slowly; <0.11gr/kg/hr of iv lipid
Effects of IV Lipid in Trauma Patients: Trauma Patients Lipid (n=30) No Lipid (n=27) P Age 33 ± 10 32 ± 9 _ ISS 27 ± 8 30 ± 9 _ Apache II 25 ± 6 22 ± 5 _ On Ventilator* 27 ± 21 15 ± 12 0.01 ICU Los* 29 ± 22 18 ± 12 0.02 Hospital Los* 39 ± 24 27 ± 16 0.03 Survival 30/30 25/27 Non-protein kcal/kg 29 ± 2 22 ± 1 % kcal as Lipid 25 ± 4 0 Amino Acids (g/kg-d) 1.6 ± 0.2 1.5 ± 0.1 * in days, LOS = length of stay Data expressed means ± SD Battistella et al. J Trauma 39: 164, 1995
Conclusion • N.S. essential to Rx/avoid malnutrition and its complication. • N.S. only helpful for patients at risk and if given correctly. • Avoid over feeding. • Avoid hyperglycemia. • Lipid at low concentrations, given slowly.
Nutritional Support • Energy - 25 kcal/kg/day • Glucose - Do not exceed 5mg/kg/min • Protein - 1.5 gr/kg/day • Lipid - Do not exceed 0.11 gr/kg/hr
Conclusion • Metabolic response to injury evolve over time . • Responses are under hormonal and cytokine control • Hypermetabolism after injury is variable. • Nitrogen loss, muscle wasting and hyperglycemia. • Outcome from injury can be enhanced by the judicious use of nutritional support.