Transcript Slide 1
WHAT’S
NEW
IN ICU NUTRITION?
‘A slender and restricted diet is always
dangerous in chronic and in acute
diseases’
‘Let food be thy medicine’
Hippocrates 400 B.C.
SICS Nutrition Network
Set up in June 2006
Links 30 dietitians, 6 pharmacists, 10 ICU
Nutrition nurses, and 17 doctors. Meets
3x/year at QMH. Around 12-18/meeting
Guidelines on practical issues planned
Website with protocols/guidelines/teaching
Educational meetings
Current projects on assessment/weighing
Encouraging projects in nutrition
SICS Nutrition Network
Meetings – videoconferencing
Presentations of local projects/audits
Ideas for new projects discussed
Reports on conferences/equipment
Discussion on topical issues e.g. nutrition
teams, education, weighing, screening
Reviews of topics planned e.g. pre-and
post-op feeding
Article circulation planned
‘Best Practice’ statements
Starting and stopping feed
Adding water to feeds
Use of MUAC
Use of different weights (ideal, actual etc)
Nasal bridles
Education
Module on SICS website
Teaching powerpoint on website
Junior doctors’ induction
FY2 teaching by nutrition nurse
Consultants’ mandatory training
Chapter for ABC of Intensive Care
Website
Audits
Nutrition audit of Scottish Units 2006 –
widely diverse practice and knowledge
HDU feeding – Fife, Forth Valley
International Nutrition QI audit: 9 units
last 2 years
Helped to inform changes in practice
Nutrition Audit form on website
% patients receiving PN/year
30
25
20
15
Unit
10
5
0
E WD I F V M X A K N Q G S P H B C R
The Downward Spiral of
Malnutrition in Severe Illness
Decreased
energy and
nutrient
intake
Serious
complications
e.g.
pneumonia
Muscle catabolism
and weight loss
Further decreased
intake
Morbidity / Mortality
Depression
and
lethargy
Delayed
recovery
Secondary
infections
Current Projects:
Nutritional Screening
Required by QIS and NICE for:
All patients on admission to hospital and
regularly thereafter
MUST introduced by BAPEN - being
widely implemented
Not helpful in ICU – all high risk
Need to identify the severely malnourished
Improves feeding of these patients
Nutritional State and Complications
in SHDU, WGH 2003
25
20
15
10
5
0
Complications
Poor
No Complications
Intermediate
Good
SNACC – 3 phases
Few ICU nutrition studies have looked at
nutritional status – probably crucial
Fife ICU nutritional screening tool
1. Pilot study completed – to repeat in
WGH + external validity study.
2. Systematic review started (funded)
3. Larger study 2010-11 - will need
funding – nutritional state and outcomes
Aim to focus nutritional intervention
What’s New inWeighing
IC
ICU patients
Weighing Patients
Essential for nutrition screening
Nutritional requirement calculations
Indirect calorimetry
Drug dosages
Cardiac output monitoring – LIDCO, PAFC,
PICCO
Fluid balance
ARDS tidal volumes
Weighing Patients
Estimation of weight can be up to 20% out:
i.e. 80 kg instead of 100kg and vice versa
Estimation of height also inaccurate but
measuring height with tape fairly accurate
We need to weigh patients in ICU
Weighing Patients
Craig Hurnauth: ICU S/N at SJH
Audit of 13/14 NHS trusts in Scotland
12 trusts do not weigh patients in ICU on
admission - use estimate/notes/family
1 weighs every day with hoist + weekly
5 use MUST
7 do not screen, 1 adapted screening tool
7 units in England – similar results
Methods of Weighing
Hoist: time consuming, needs several
nurses, risky for unstable patients or
trauma patients
Weigh beds £16000 each
Digital bed scales – scales for each wheel
of the bed – weighs bed + patient,
mobile, minimal manpower, no disruption
to patient
Methods of Weighing
Progress since audit:
2 units have bought weigh beds
5 are considering bed scales
Challenges in Critical Care Nutrition
1. Keeping up with evidence - guidelines
2. Screening/weighing
3. Prevention and treatment of
complications
4. Outdated surgical practices/ Perioperative feeding
5. Achieving calorific and protein targets
6. Immunonutrition
Guidelines
Guidelines
CCCTG Nutritional Support updated: 2009
www.criticalcarenutrition.com
ESPEN Parenteral Nutrition guidelines
2009, EN 2006, (ASPEN guidelines)
NICE guidelines on Nutrition Support in
Adults
QIS Standards
MUST (BAPEN)
Screening/Refeeding Syndrome
Prisoners of war 1944-5, 1944:
conscientious objectors in USA studied
Starvation: early use of glycogen stores and
gluconeogenesis from amino acids
72 hrs: fatty acid oxidation; use of fatty
acids and ketones for energy source, low
insulin levels
Atrophy of organs, reduced lean body mass
Refeeding syndrome
Carbohydrate feeding: shift to CH metabolism
Insulin release, Mg lost in urine
Phosphate and potassium shift into cells.
Magnesium, potassium and phosphate drop
May get Lactic acidosis
Sodium and water shift out of cells – oedema
Insulin causes sodium retention
Protein synthesis needs potassium and
phosphate - these drop more
Thiamine deficiency occurs (co-factor in CH
metabolism): encephalopathy, weakness
Refeeding Syndrome in ICU
Unlikely to be a clear diagnosis
Many effects: oedema, arrhythmias,
pulmonary oedema, cardiac
decompensation, respiratory weakness,
fits, hypotension, leukocyte dysfunction,
diarrhoea, coma, rhabdomyolysis, sudden
death
Screen: nutritional history and electrolytes
Remember in HDU patients/malnourished
ward patients
Poor awareness among doctors!
Risk of re-feeding syndrome
Two or more of the following:
BMI less than 18.5 kg/m2 (<16)
unintentional weight loss greater than 10%
within the last 3-6 months (>15%)
little or no nutritional intake for more than 5
days (>10)
Hx alcohol abuse or drugs including insulin,
chemotherapy, antacids or diuretics
Critically low levels of PO42-, K+ and Mg2+
NICE Guidelines for Nutrition Support in Adults 2006
Managing refeeding problems
provide Thiamine
(Pabrinex)/multivitamin/trace element
supplementation
start nutrition support at 10-15
kcal/kg/day
increase levels over 3-5 days
restore circulatory volume
monitor fluid balance and clinical status
replace phosphate, magnesium and K+
Reduce feeding rate if problems arise
NICE Guidelines for Nutrition
Support in Adults 2006
Complications
Ileus- caused by: fluid overload, pain,
hyperglycaemia, hypokalaemia, opioids,
immobility, sepsis – trickle of feed if gut
intact. Consider Neostigmine/prokinetics
Constipation: avoid and treat; drugs
Diarrhoea: exclude infections, optimise
fluid balance and electrolytes, replace loss
Intolerance: ? Sepsis, NJ feeding, PKs
Feeding aids fluid and electrolyte balance
Overfeeding
Lactic acidosis
Hyperglycaemia
Increased infections
Liver impairment (Alk phos, ALT, GGT,
acalculous cholecystitis)
Persistent pyrexia
Underfeeding probably even more
dangerous – studies starting to emerge –
need to get the balance right
Outdated surgical practices
Outdated surgical practice
Reluctance to feed at all
Prolonged semi-starvation
Sips of water/Over-IV hydration
Incidence and treatment of ileus
Nervous surgeon syndrome
Evidence from ERAS – pre-op CH loading
Benefits of early post-op feeding
Over/under-use of PN
Intake in HDU
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Day 1
Day 2
Day 3
NBM
Sips
Fluids
Day 4
Day 5
Oral
TPN
Day 6
NG
Calorific and Protein Targets
25kcl/kg/day up to 30 in recovery phase
Aim to provide energy as close as possible to
target to avoid negative energy balance
Protein 1.3 – 1.5g/kg/day (optimal prtn sparing)
CVVH – lose AAs in filter – need to give 20%
more using amino acid supplements
Protein deficits may be very important
Increasing evidence that patients with deficits in
1st 3-5 days do worse (?severely malnourished)
Indirect calorimetry – the future?
Maintaining enteral intake
Follow a protocol; use prokinetics/NJs
Gastric residuals: do not stop feed until
you have 2 residuals of >250mls (check
clinical signs) 400mls may be ok
Starting and stopping feed:
Extubations, fasting for theatre, scans,
minor procedures
Can catch up on feed that is missed
ESPEN: PN in ICU
All patients receiving less than their targeted
enteral feeding after 2 days should be
considered for supplementary PN
All patients not able to receive EN within 2448 hours should be given PN
CCCN: Inadequate enteral nutrition <80% of
target after 3 days: PN
Do not delay nutrition in malnourished
Keep 10ml/hr EN if possible
Immunonutrition
The future: replacement of the body’s own
‘stress substrates’ and reduction of
inflammation?
ESPEN – new recommendations –
glutamine in all PN 0.2-0.4g/kg/day
??? SIGNET/REDOXs
glutamine in enteral nutrition for burns
and trauma
Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids
Omega-6
ү-Linoleic acid (GLA) – borage oil
Arachidonic Acid precursor
Omega-3 Fish oils: Eicosapentanoic acid
(EPA) and Docosahexanoic acid (DHA)
Dietary Lipids
Ratios in paleolithic diet ω6:ω-3 1:1
Current Western diet 16:1
Current UK PN Soybean oil base 7:1
New PN (‘SMOF’) 2.5:1
Cell membrane composition depends on balance
AA, DHA and EPA are present in inflammatory
cell membrane phospholipids
Mechanisms of Action
ω-3s EPA/DHA are incorporated quickly into cell
membrane: inhibit ω-6 activity
Promote synthesis of low activity PGs and LTs
Decrease expression of adhesion molecules
Inhibit monocyte prodn of pro-inflamm cytokines
Decrease NFkB, increases lymphocyte apoptosis
Decrease pro-inflammatory gene expression
Lipoxins, resolvins and protectins
3 Studies: OXEPA
Patients with ARDS fed with GLA, EPA and
antioxidants had a reduction in pulmonary
neutrophils
Improvement in oxygenation
Decrease in ventilator days
Decrease in ICU and hospital days
Gadek, Singer, Pontes-Arruda (sepsis)
Recommended by ESPEN in ARDS
ESPEN PN Guidelines
PN for critically ill surgical patients should
probably include ω-3 fatty acids. Fish oil
enriched lipid emulsions probably reduce
ICU LOS.
The tolerance of MCT/LCT and olive oil
emulsions is well established. These
probably have advantages over LCT based
lipid preparations – small studies so far.
Anti-oxidants
Normal state: reduction > oxidation
Acute stress: injury/sepsis causes acute
dysregulation: ROS/RNOS formed
Mitochondria are both sources and targets
Observational studies: anti-oxidant
capacity inversely correlated with disease
severity due to depletion during oxidative
OXIDATION
stress
REDUCTION
Antioxidants
Glutathione, Vitamins A, C and E
Zinc, copper, manganese, iron, selenium
Already added to feeds
Should we give extra? ESPEN:
VitC/thiamine/Se/Zn in CVVH/burns
Results of SIGNET and REDOXs awaited
Oxidative stress in critically ill patients
contributes to organ damage / malignant
inflammation
To conclude:
Screen your patients
Early enteral feeding is best
Hyperglycaemia/overfeeding are bad
Keep glucose down <10mmol/l (safely)
Nutritional deficit a/w worse outcome
Use EN and PN early to achieve goals
Audit delivery of nutrition regularly
Protocols improve delivery of feed
Some nutrients show promising results:
we should probably start using them now
Please feed me enough and
with the right stuff!