Metabolic Stress 1 Sepsis, Trauma, Surgery 2020
Metabolic Stress 1 Sepsis, Trauma, Surgery 2020
Metabolic Stress 1 Sepsis, Trauma, Surgery 2020
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Course Outline
• MNT for metabolic stress I:
• Metabolic response to stress
• Sepsis
• Head injury
• Surgery
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What do you need to focus on?
• Physiology during metabolic stress
• Nutritional status assessment –
malnutrition risks, refeeding syndrome,
overfeeding
• Mode of nutrition provision – oral/ enteral/
parenteral/ both
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MNT – what you need to focus?
• Energy – bw to use, equation to calculate
EE
• Protein – generally hi protein, presence of
comorbidities
• CHO, fat – presence of comorbidities
• Micronutrients – presence of
comorbidities, substance to enhance
metabolism
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Metabolic Stress
• Trauma MVA, gunshot, stab wound, falls, burns
major cause of death and disability
Algorithm content developed by John Anderson, PhD, and Sanford C. Garner, PhD, 2000. 6
Hypermetabolic Response to Stress-
Pathophysiology
Algorithm content developed by John Anderson, PhD, and Sanford C. Garner, PhD, 2000.
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• Metabolic response to stress divided into:
Energy expenditure
Flow Phase
Ebb Phase
Time
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Flow phase is divided into 2 response:
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Starvation vs Stress
• Loss of muscle is slower to • In contrast during stress
preserve lean body mass. energy expenditure is
• Stored glycogen is depleted increased,
within 24 hrs. Gluconeogenesis,
• Glucose is available from the proteolysis and
breakdown of protein to amino ureagenesis are increased.
acids. • Stress is activated by cell
• Insulin is reduced and glucagon mediators and counter
is increased. regulatory hormones.
• Decreased energy
expenditure, diminished
gluconeogenesis, increased
vs
ketone body production and
decreased ureagenesis.
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Metabolic Response to Starvation
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Energy Expenditure in Starvation & Trauma
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Metabolic Response
to Starvation and Trauma
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Hormonal Stress Response
• Aldosterone - corticosteroid that causes renal sodium retention.
• Minimize catabolism
• Meet energy requirements, but do not overfeed
- Use indirect calorimetry if possible
- Non-obese: 25-30 kcal/kg/day
- Obese: 14-18 kcal/kg/day of actual body weight
• Meet protein, vitamin, and mineral needs
• Establish & maintain fluid and electrolyte balance
• Plan nutrition therapy (oral, enteral, and/or
parenteral nutrition)
• Need for pharmaconutrients
• Physical therapy
• Exercise
Algorithm content developed by John Anderson, PhD, and Sanford C. Garner, PhD, 2000. Updated by Maion F. Winkler and Ainsley
Malone, 2002.
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When you enter an ICU
you will see patients in
this condition
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NUTRITIONAL ASSESSMENT
• Traditional nutrition monitoring methods not
adequate/reliable.
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Factors to Consider in Screening an ICU
Patient:
• ICU medical admission.
- Diagnosis, nutritional status, organ function, pharmacologic
agents.
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Nutrition Intervention
• Oral route is the preferred route to meet the requirements.
• However, for critically ill pt, usually the requirement only can
be met via EN or PN.
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ASPEN Guidelines
• ASPEN (American Society of Parenteral and Enteral
Nutrition).
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Timing of Enteral Nutrition and Critical
Illness
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Energy
• Enough but not too much.
• Excess calories:
– Hyperglycemia
• Diuresis – complicates fluid/electrolyte balance
– Hepatic steatosis (fatty liver)
– Excess CO2 production
• Exacerbate respiratory insufficiency
• Prolong weaning from mechanical ventilation
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Indirect Calorimetry
• Better estimate in critically ill
hypermetabolic patient.
Malone AM. Methods of assessing energy expenditure in the intensive care unit. Nutr Clin
Pract 17:21-28, 2002. 27
Best approach:
• If IC not available → recommended 20-25 kcal/kg BW in the early
acute phase, increased to 25-30 kcal/kg in the stabilized pts.
• Spontaneously Breathing
IJEE(s) = 629 − 11 (A) + 25 (W) − 609 (O)
Where:
– IJEE: kcal/day
– A = age in years
– W = weight (kg)
– O = presence of obesity >30% above IBW (0 = absent, 1 = present)
– G = gender (female = 0, male = 1)
– T = diagnosis of trauma (absent = 0, present = 1)
– B = diagnosis of burn (absent = 0, present = 1)
*Use actual wt
(MNT Critically Ill, 31
2017)
Penn State Equation
• PSU (2003b): Normal Weight (all age) @ <60 years old & Obese
(BMI ≥30)
RMR = Mifflin-St Jeor(0.96) + Tmax(167) + Ve(31) − 6212
• PSU (modified 2011): ≥60 years old & Obese (BMI ≥30)
RMR = Mifflin-St Jeor(0.71) + Tmax(85) + Ve(64) − 3085
Where:
- W = weight (kg)
- H = Height (cm)
- Ve = minute ventilation (litres per minute)
- T = temperature in °C
• Ireton-Jones uses actual weight in the equations and then adjusts for
obesity.
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What Weight Do You Use?
• Lean body mass is highly correlated with actual weight in persons of
all sizes.
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Patients’ BMI Suggested Body Weight to be Used in Predictive Equation or
Category Simplistic Weight-based Equation (25-30 kcal/kg)
Underweight • Use actual body weight# for predictive equation and ideal or usual body
(BMI: <18.5 weight for simplistic weight-based equation
kg/m2) • Refer to the refeeding syndrome protocol if patients are at high risk of
developing refeeding syndrome
Normal weight Use actual body weight
(BMI: 18.5−24.9
kg/m2)
Overweight Use ideal body weight (at BMI 22.5) or actual body weight
(BMI: 25.0−29.9
kg/m2)
Obese • Use actual body weight# for Penn State 2003b (<60 years old) or Penn
(BMI ≥30.0 State (m) (≥60 years old), and provide 50%−70% of calculated caloric
kg/m2) requirements.
• Use actual body weight# in the formula 11−14 kcal/kg if BMI 30−50
kg/m2
• Use ideal body weight in the formula 22−25 kcal/kg if BMI >50 kg/m2
Definitions: Actual body weight = patients’ current weight; Usual body weight = patients’ baseline weight prior to fluid
resuscitation; Dry weight = patients’ normal weight without any extra fluid in the body; Ideal body weight = patients’ weight at BMI
22.5 kg/m2.
# In all critically ill patients following aggressive volume resuscitation or presented with oedema, anasarca or ascites, use dry
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usual body weight where possible. (MNT Critically Ill, 2017)
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(Yatabe, 2019)
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(Yatabe, 2019)
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Objectives
• First, fluid resuscitation and treatment of cause of
hypermetabolism.
Electrolytes/Vitamins/Trace Elements
• Enteral feedings: begin with RDA values
• PN: use PN dosing guidelines
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Definition
• Sepsis: an uncontrolled inflammatory response to infection or
trauma (immunosuppressive response to infection).
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Bacterial Translocation
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MNT in Selected
Populations in Critical Care
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1. Head Injury
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• Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Severely hypermetabolic and
catabolic.
• The more severe the head injury, the greater the release of
catecholamines (norepinephrine and epinephrine) and cortisol and the
greater the hypermetabolic response.
• Protein:
– 1.5 – 2.5 g/kg/day
(MNT Critically Ill, 2017)
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2. Trauma
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MNT
• Energy :
– 20 – 35 kcal/kg/day depending on the phase
of trauma.
• Protein needs:
– 1.2 – 2.0 g/kg/day
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3. Sepsis
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MNT
• Energy :
– 25 kcal/kg/day or published predictive
equations may be used
• Protein needs:
– 1.2 – 2.0 g/kg/day
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4. Surgery
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• Surgery: an operative procedure used to diagnose,
repair, or treat an organ tissue. Can be further classify to
major/minor surgery.
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Present Practice : preoperative nutrition
care
• The routine practice of ordering that a patient take NBM
at midnight prior to surgery has been discontinued.
Nutrition management
strategies in ERAS.
- Please refer MNT
Critically Ill, 2017
(Appendix 16)
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MNT
• Energy:
– Will vary with type of surgery, degree of trauma
– Use Ireton-Jones or Penn State if data is available*
– Can use estimate of 25-30 kcal/kg/d to begin and monitor
response to therapy**
– E = 20-35 kcal/kg/d, Protein = 1.2-2.0 g/kg/d***
• Protein:
– Minor surgery : 1.0 - 1.1 g/kg
– Major Surgery : 1.2 – 1.5 g/kg
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Hypocaloric Feedings
• Recommended in specific patient populations.
• 11 – 14 kcal/kg actual BW
• 22 – 25 kcal/kg IBW
(ESPEN, 2009)
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References
• Mahan, L.K, & Escott-Stump, S. & Raymond J.L.(20120.M Krause’s Food and the
Nutrition Care Process (13th ed).
• Medical Nutrition Therapy (MNT) Guidelines for Critically Ill Adults, 2 nd Edition
(2017).
• Guidelines for the Provision and Assessment of Nutrition Support Therapy in the
Adult Critically Ill Patient JPEN 2016 Vol 40, Issue 2, pp. 159 – 211.
• Clinical Guidelines for the Use of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition in Adult and
Pediatric Patients JPEN 2009, Vol 33, Issue 3, pp. 255 – 259.
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Thank You…
Any Question???
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