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April 27, 2007. Edmonton and Area.www.capitalhealth.ca. Objectives. Patient PopulationBarriers and Challenges of nutrition supportEnergy expenditure and determinationParenteral NutritionEnteral NutritionBiochemistryPhysiology of metabolic stressWhat can we do?. April 27, 2007. Edmonton and A
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1. The Last Frontier: Nutrition Support in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit Bodil Larsen BSC, RD,
PhD Candidate
Clinical Dietitian, PICU
Stollery Pediatric Intensive Care
2. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Objectives Patient Population
Barriers and Challenges of nutrition support
Energy expenditure and determination
Parenteral Nutrition
Enteral Nutrition
Biochemistry
Physiology of metabolic stress
What can we do?
3. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Stollery PICU Patient Population 36 wks gestation to 16 yrs old
Heart, gastrointestinal, liver, neuro, airway, renal, traumas, transplants, sepsis
ECMO, peritoneal dialysis, CVVHD, pre and post-op, chylothorax
Sedation, paralysis, ventilation, drugs
Sepsis, multi-organ failure
4. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Stollery PICU Patient Population All require modification or consideration when providing metabolic or nutrition support
*Not a feeding and growing unit
5. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Barriers and Challenges of Nutrition Support Metabolic vs nutrition support
Wasting specific lesions (pre-operative nutritional status)
Hemodynamic instability
Severe hypotensive gut
Fluid restriction
Enteral vs parenteral
Philosophy nutrition support will do more harm than good in immediate post-operative period
Urgency to remove central line
6. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Too Little vs Too Much
7. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Too Little vs Too Much Sedation
Paralysis
Intubation/ventilation
+ inotropes
+ wasting
8. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Determining Caloric Requirements
9. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Tools Used for Determination Indirect calorimetry
Underlying disease process
Biochemistrys and nitrogen balance
Published papers (reference charts)
Nutritional status
10. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Under or Overfeeding the Critically Ill Child Caloric overfeeding cannot reverse obligatory catabolism during hypermetabolic states and is associated with increased mortality and clinical detriment.
Caloric under feeding can effect ventilator days, length of stay and number of infections
Pre-operative nutritional status is important
The lower the weight, the higher the risk
How long are we comfortable leaving without support.
11. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Expectations of Nutrition Support pre-op nutrition support
rehabing
feeding - growing (anabolic)
____________________________________
post-op metabolic support
critically ill
ventilated
sedated (catabolic)
12. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca
13. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Pilot Study
14. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Cachexia
15. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca
16. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Measured EE was stable and not significantly different from predicted values over the course of hospitalization. Underfeeding was frequently present and mainly due to prescription and administration of energy amounts inferior to measured EE values in enterally fed patients
Pediatric Crit Care Med 2006; 7:147-153
17. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Route of Administration: Enteral vs Parenteral Indications for TPN:
SBS
Ileus
Severe dysmotility
NEC
Unable to provide adequate support with enteral nutrition
The gut can be used in critical illness
18. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca
19. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca TPN initiation dependent on age, size, nutritional status, disease, surgery or medical intervention
In small preterm infants starvation for 1 day may be detrimental
Older children can wait up to 7 days dependent on circumstance Espghan Guidelines
20. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Enteral: Enteral Nutrition Advantages:
Decreased cost
Decreased metabolic abnormalities
Decreased infectious risk
Promotes GI integrity
Stimulates enteric secretions, hormones and blood flow
Decreased bacterial translocation
21. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Enteral: Critically ill pediatric patients have multiple
factors that decrease gastric emptying:
Formula osmolarity
Fat content
Lipid carbon chain length
Medications (narcotics, benzodiazepines, sedatives)
Continuous feeds are best
Small bowel feeds very successful
22. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca
23. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca
24. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca
25. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Causes of Diarrhea in Enterally Fed Children
26. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Feeding the Hypotensive Patient shocked bypass
resuscitated pressors
? ileus hypoperfusion
? sepsis hypotension
Enteral is good but can we feed without
exacerbating intestinal hypoxia?
27. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Feeding the Hypotensive Patient Splancnic bed gets:
25% cardiac output at rest
30% of oxygen consumption is in the splancnic
bed
small intestine 44%
* Arterial blood flow stomach 12%
colon 17%
28. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Feeding the Hypotensive Patient Villus tips suffer most damage during hypoxia
they have the greatest digestive function.
When we feed the gut, the selection of
nutrients will alter the metabolic function and
oxygen demand of the enterocyte.
29. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Feeding the Hypotensive Patient There is the potential to do harm as the presence of food in the intestine may increase oxygen demand beyond available delivery of blood flow, leading to necrotic bowel.
30. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Feeding the Hypotensive Patient Polymeric formulas require more oxygen and
blood to be metabolized, therefore, you need:
increased blood flow
increased energy expenditure
increased oxygen
Complex formulas crave more than elemental
food stuffs.
31. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Elemental Feeds mothers milk vs formula
if no EBM we use elemental
art vs science
higher protein
feeding on inotropes/hypotensive gut
MCT fatty acids are not inflammatory and cannot be used for eicosanoid production
decreases bacterial translocation
digested and absorbed faster
32. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Parenteral Metabolic Complications:
Amino acids toxic
Carbohydrate
Hepatic stenosis
Cholestasis
-? alk phos
- ? GGT
- ? bili
Fat depressed immune function
Reduced bacterial clearance
Increased triglycerides
33. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Total Parenteral Nutrition central vs peripheral line
1000 vs 2000 mosmols/L
++ electrolyte increases osmolarity
severe fluid restrictions
15+ % protein, 45% carbohydrate, 40% fat (8-10 mg/kg/min
carnitine
1:1 heparin
control over lytes, extra glucose, D5W - D5W - D12
34. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca
35. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Biochemistries in PICU Serum albumin, urea, triglycerides, magnesium
? Mg 20%
? trig 25%
? urea 30%
? albumin 52%
? uremia ? ? SD scores for weight and arm circumference between admission and discharge
? triglycerides ? > ventilator dependence days and length of stay than children with triglyceride levels
36. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Association of timing, duration, and intensity of hyperglycemia with intensive care unit mortality in Critically Ill Children Retrospective, 152 children, ventilated, inotropes
1 21 years
Measured peak glucose, time to peak, duration of hyperglycemia were analyzed for association with PICU mortality
Non-survivors had higher peaks (17 vs 11 mmol/L)
Non-survivors had longer duration (71% vs 37% days)
Positive independent association with mortality
More research needed
37. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Persistent hyperglycemia in Critically Ill Children Retrospective 95 infants (6508 glucose samples) with confirmed NEC
Incidence of hyperglycemia in infants with NEC and relationship between glucose levels and outcome
69% were hyperglycemic (> 8mmol/L(0.5-35)
Mortality higher in >11.9 mmol/L group than < 11.9 mmol/L group (32/95 died)
G-max group mortality 29% vs 2%
G-max group significantly related to LOS
38. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Glucose level and risk of mortality in Pediatric Septic Shock Prospective, observational cohort x 32 months
57/1053 enrolled
In non survivors peak glucose was 14.5 mmol/L vs 9.2 in survivors
Conclusion in patients with septic shock a peak glucose level of 9.9 is associated with increased risk of death.
39. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Expected Results
40. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca
41. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Sepsis vs TNF vs LPL
42. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Impact of n-6 vs n-3
43. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Signs and Symptoms of Refeeding Syndrome
44. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca A Metabolic Model of Critical Illness
45. April 27, 2007 Edmonton and Area.
www.capitalhealth.ca Nutrition Support in the ICU is not generic but: Patient specific
Disease specific
Macro and Micronutrient specific
Biochemically specific
Stage specific