Nutrition: Information and Advice & Neutropenic Diets
Nutrition: Information and Advice & Neutropenic Diets
Nutrition: Information and Advice & Neutropenic Diets
Appetite
You may experience appetite loss due to symptoms, treatments, co-existing conditions or feelings of anxiety, stress
or depression which can be associated with your MDS.
The thought of cooking or eating alone may be off putting and can lead to some people skipping meals. If you are
finding it hard to be motivated to cook and eat meals, try new recipes that interest you or recipes which don’t
require much preparation, such as using frozen foods. Eating out every so often can help you to become more
interested in food and can provide company. Consider a meal service so that you do not have to prepare food but
still get nutritious meals. Make mealtime pleasant by setting the table and try switching on the television or
listening to the radio while you eat.
If you are struggling to eat, it is important to always try and stay hydrated by drinking plenty of fluids. Try eating
smaller portions of fluid meals and eating whenever you get hungry, as opposed to at set meal times. If you are
finding it hard to find motivation to prepare meals, try having easy to prepare and nutritious snacks. Having certain
snacks can help those with a poor diet get the nutrition and energy they need:
Savoury snacks Soups, cheese and crackers, baked beans on toast, jacket potato, tinned spaghetti, rice or
rice porridge with cooked meat, sandwiches, breakfast cereals (eaten at any time), toasted muffins, meat
dumplings, processed cheese such as cheese triangles or slices, roasted nuts, crisps and dips.
Sweet snacks Chocolate or plain sweet biscuits, individual bars of chocolate/ sweets, thick and creamy
yoghurts/ fromage frais, individual cold desserts/ tinned puddings, hot cross buns or sweet waffles.
Patients with neutropenia should follow guidelines for foods to avoid to help prevent infection.
Patients with profound neutropenia should follow extra guidelines for further precaution.
Applies to... Foods to avoid Alternative Foods
Soft ripened cheese (e.g. Brie, Camembert, Processed cheese (e.g. Philadelphia,
goats cheese) and blue veined cheese (e.g. Dairylea), vacuum packed pasteurised and
Stilton) hard cheese (e.g. Cheddar or edam)
Grade 1
Raw or lightly cooked shellfish Well cooked, tinned or vacuum packed
Neutropenia
Smoked/raw/undercooked meat or sushi meats and fish (such as packed ham or
AND turkey or tinned tuna)
Cold, loose meats from a deli or counter
Profound Raw eggs or undercooked egg Hard boiled eggs
Neutropenia Pro-biotic, live or bio products Pasteurised plain or fruit yoghurts
Paté Pasteurised paté and pastes in jars or tins
All unpasteurised dairy products Any pasteurised milk or cheese
Raw unpeeled fruit or vegetables including Good quality fruit and vegetables cooked
salad and daw dried fruit and uncooked nuts and peeled, long-life fruit juices, cooked
(e.g. muesli, unpasteurised fruit juice) dried fruit (e.g. Cereal bars), cooked nuts.
Profound Uncooked herbs, spices and black pepper Cooked herbs, spices and black pepper
Neutropenia Unpasteurised honey and honeycomb Pasteurised honey
Non-drinking water, bottled mineral or spring Freshly run tap, filtered, sterilised,
water carbonated water