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Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty
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Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

Enteral Nutrition

NFSC 370

McCafferty

Page 2: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients

Page 3: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

B. Preferred over parenteral nutrition:

Page 4: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

C. Indications for use

Page 5: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

Page 6: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

D. Contraindications for use

Page 7: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.
Page 8: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

Types of Formulas1. Standard/Intact/Polymeric Formulas

Complete macronutrient molecules:

Pt. must be able to digest/absorb nutrients

Page 9: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

2. Hydrolyzed (Elemental) Formulas

Low fat or MCT Low residue

Page 10: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

3. Modular Formulas e.g. Polycose, Promod

Can be added to existing enteral formula to modify its composition

Can be combined together to create a highly individualized formula (rare)

Page 11: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

Formula Composition1. Kcalories

Standard – Concentrated –

2. Residue: contributes to fecal bulk Low residue formula:

3. Fiber

• Fuel:

Page 12: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

4. Osmolality: concentration of particles in a solution (mOsm/kg) Osmolality of blood – Isotonic solution: Hypertonic solution:

• –

Cost: Standard formulas are cheapest.

Page 13: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

Formula Selection

Page 14: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.
Page 15: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

Routes of Administration

A. Nasogastric (NG)Passage of the feeding tube transnasally into the stomach

1. Advantages

a.

b.

Page 16: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

2. Disadvantages

a. Potentially aspirated:

b. Patient can pull out the tube

c. Nose and esophagus can become irritated

d. Cosmetically unattractive

Page 17: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

B. Nasoduodenal/Nasojejunal: Passed nasogastrically into stomach, migrate to

small bowel

1. Advantages

a.

b.

Page 18: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

2. Disadvantages

a.

b. Limits choice of formulas:

Page 19: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

c. Increased chance of hypoglycemia (as in dumping syndrome)

d. Patient can pull out the tube

e. Nose and esophagus can become irritated

f. Cosmetically unattractive

Page 20: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

C. Gastrostomy (PEG, G-tube) – Endoscopically placed into stomach, then brought out through abdominal wall (PEG) or surgically placed (GT)

More permanent – for use when TF will be long-term or if tube can’t be passed 2’obstruction, etc.

Page 21: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

1. Advantages

a.

b.

c.

2. Disadvantages

a.

b.

c.

Page 22: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

D. Jejunostomy (PEJ, J-Tube)

1. Advantages

a.

b.

c.

2. Disadvantages

a. Can’t recannulate if the tube comes out

b. Penetrates peritoneum; source of infection

Page 23: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

Formula Delivery

** Head of bed should be elevated 300 during and after TF administration to minimize risk of aspiration.

Page 24: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

1. Bolus feeding or “meal infusion”

a.

b.

c.

d.

e.

f.

Page 25: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

2. Continuous infusiona. Continuous delivery in controlled amounts over

24hours

b. Controlled delivery for enhanced GI tolerance (not much difference if delivered to stomach with functioning pylorus)

c. Begin isotonic formula at FS at a slow rate

d. rate as tolerance allows in stepwise increments until nutrient goals are met

e. Gastric residuals

Page 26: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

f. Gravity vs. Pump Gravity method less accurate

• More attention must be paid to tube size, location, and patient mobility.

• Not advisable with closed system delivery Pump – more accurate, enhances GI tolerance,

more expensive

Page 27: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

3. Cyclic feedinga. E.g. b. c.

4. All feedings: Supplemental Watera. Water used to flush feeding tube before and

after feeding/when tube/bag are changedb. Pay attention to hydration status of pt.c. Total water should be

d. Typical TF formula is

Page 28: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

5. Drugs via Tubea. Can cause drug-nutrient interactions

b. Formula can affect drug absorption

c. Some drugs can clog tubes

Page 29: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

Tube Feeding Complications

1. Failure to achieve/maintain adequate nutrition status

a. Check calculations

b.

c.

d.

e. Monitor pt. tolerance of TF

Page 30: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

2. Diarrhea

a. May be related to formula, illness, or other treatments

b.

c. Bacterial contamination

d. Infusion rate too high –

e. Hypertonic formula –

f. Malnutrition/low serum albumin – slow rate or continuous drip.

Page 31: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

3. Aspiration

4. Nausea

5. Malabsorption

6. Clogged feeding tube

7. Fluid/lyte imbalances

8. Hyperglycemia

9. Refeeding Syndrome (to be discussed in “Stress” chapter)

Page 32: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

Calculations1. Caloric Requirements of Patient

H-B/Long’s method or kcals/kg

2. Protein Requirements

a. _____g/kg current weight (or adjusted weight )

b. Kcal:N ratio

200:1 not stress, hospitalized

150:1 moderate stress

100:1 severe stress, such as burns, sepsis, head injury

Page 33: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

3. Water Requirements 1ml/kcal, or 30-35ml/kg/day minimum (adults

only).

4. Calculating Tube Feeding: (refer to handout)

Page 34: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.
Page 35: Enteral Nutrition NFSC 370 McCafferty A. Definition: Utilization of the GI tract to supply nutrients l l l.

Charting

Enteral Order: Date, product, rate, strength, additional fluid, IV fluids if applicable

Nutritional Provisions: Kcals, protein, and fluid provided

Labs: Albumin, BUN, Na, and Glucose

Nutritional Needs: Kcals, protein, and fluids(as calculated with Harris-Benedict equation, etc.)

Assessment: Albumin and wt. status, hydration status, appropriateness/adequacy of enteral order, tolerance, nutrition status of patient.