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Nutrition in Surgical Patients Ronald Merrell, MD Chairman of Surgery Virginia Commonwealth University What? • • • • • Carbohydrate Lipid Protein Trace elements Vitamins Who? • Malnourished (>10% lean body mass) • Incapable of eating (>10 days) Why? • Risks of malnutrition including infection, poor healing and higher mortality • Malnutrition is exacerbated by physiological stress When? • • • • Preoperative? Early? Late? ---after initial resuscitation following injury or surgery How? • • • • Parenteral Enteral Total Partial Issues • • • • Metabolic response to injury Cytokines, inflammation, hormones Biology of substrates Enteral vs. Parenteral “Ashen faces, a thready pulse and cold clammy extremities…” The Ebb Phase Cuthbertson, Quart. J. Med.25:233,1932 The Ebb Phase • • • • Hypometabolic Hypothermic Hypoinsulinemic Hypoperfusion • • • • Hypercortisolism Hyperglucagonemia Hyperglycemia Hypercatecholemia “The patient warms up,cardiac output increases and the surgical team relaxes…” The Flow Phase Cuthbertson. Lancet 1:233, 1942 The Flow Phase • Hypermetabolic • Hyperthermic • Catabolic • • • • Hyperinsulinism Hypercortisolism Hyperglucagonemia High cardiac output Nutritional Assessment • • • • Body weight Body mass index creatinine height index Serum proteins:albumin, prealbumin, transferrin • Immune competence: lymphocytes, DH • Nitrogen balance Caloric Requirement • • • • Formula Indirect calorimetry PRN for nitrogen balance Approximation Nutritional Requirements • • • • • 25 cal/kg/day carbohydrate ~70% Lipid 15-30% Protein 1.5-2.0g/kg/day. Not for calories Additional 50% to 100% for stress as in ICU patients Nutritional Goals • • • • • Nitrogen balance Preserve or restore visceral protein Reduce morbidity Reduce mortality Reduce hospital stay Early Enteral Feeding: a metaanalysis • Eight prospective randomized trials with trauma and high risk surgical patients(118 enteral, 112 parenteral) • Septic complications:enteral 18%, parenteral 35% • Moore. Ann. Surg. 216:172,1992 Parenteral requirements • Dilution in right heart return because of hyperosmolarity…….Central Venous Line • Delivery of simple carbohydrate (20%glucose) • Lipid emulsion • Amino acids Enteral Requirements • Delivery into the GI tract by tube with minimum risk of aspiration or patient effort • Delivery of nutrients with minimal need for digestion • Control of rate to prevent osmotic diarrhea Advantages of enteral nutrition • • • • Easier GI bacterial translocation Cheaper Fewer specific complications Nutrients with specific putative contributions • • • • • Branch chain amino acids Glutamine Arginine Nucleotides Omega-3 fatty acids Immune Enhancing Diet • Arginine, nucleotide, fish oil • Shorter stay, fewer infections • Bower Critical Care Medicine. 23:436, 1995 • • • • • • Parenteral Nutrition Immunosuppressive IF... Poorly administered Hyperglycemia No nucleotides No arginine No taurine Excessive fats Overfeeding with parenteral diets • Carbohydrate: hyperglycemia, hypercarbia, fatty liver • Lipids: hypertriglyceridemia, hypoxia, infection • Protein: azotemia Conclusions • Nutrition is a powerful determinate of patient outcome • The proper provision of nutrition is a component of basic patient care • Nutrition is a precise and potentially very hazardous form of intervention