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UNDERNUTRITION AND WEIGHT LOSS IN THE ELDERLY NAUSHIRA PANDYA M.D.,C.M.D. Chair and Associate Professor Department of Geriatrics Director, Geriatric Education Center, NSU COM CECILIA ROKUSEK Ed.D., R.D. Professor of Family Medicine and Public Health Executive Director, Geriatric Education Center, NSU COM The scope of the problem Mode of living Free-living Sec, UK Prevalence(%) References 5 Dept of Health and Social 7 Dept of Health and Social 5 2 1-4 39 59 50 22 30-60 10-85 Blondel-Cynober et al. Lowink et al. Cederholm et al. Cederholm et al. Rapin et al. Alix. Volkert et al. Rudman et al. Kerstetter et al. Sec, UK Hospital Nursing home 52 3000 51 2500 50 2000 49 (Kcal) 3500 1500 48 1000 47 500 46 0 45 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 Age(y) 60-69 70-79 >80 (% of energy) Change in food intake over the life spanNHANES III Kcal Men Kcal Women Carbs NHANES 111 DATA 4% of persons between 60-69 yr were unable to prepare their meals or walk around 23% of persons over 80 yr were unable to prepare their meals and 17% were unable to walk GFR < 30ml/min/1.72m2 major risk factor for malnutrition in older adults 30-40% of patients on dialysis were malnourished Marwick C. JAMA 1997;227 Normal aging changes, physical, psychological and social precipitants Anorexia Weight loss Malnutrition Depression Cognitive dysfunction Social withdrawal Isolation Giving up DEATH Egbert Barriers to adequate nutritional management of older patients by physicians Inadequate training in recognizing protein calorie undernutrition Unawareness that protein calorie undernutrition may be the presenting feature of many treatable diseases in the elderly Unawareness of currently available treatment options Morley Conditions associated with protein-energy undernutrition in the elderly Immune deficiency, increased infection, pneumonia Pressure ulcers Poor wound healing Anemia Falls Cognitive deficits, increased delirium Osteopenia, hip fractures Altered drug metabolism Sarcopenia, weakness, fatigue Orthostatic hypotension and dehydration Non-thyroidal illness Decreased maximal breathing capacity Decreased cardiac output Predictors of nutritional disorders and disability Katz ADL index score Serum albumin level Patient’s current weight as percentage of usual weight Number of prescribed medications taken Presence of renal disease (BUN level > 30) Individual’s income Presence of one or more decubiti (grade II or higher) Dysphagia Mid-arm muscle circumference Sullivan DH Nutrition and immunity in the elderly Infections are more common in the undernourished - especially pulmonary Cell-mediated immunity and delayed hypersensitivity declines Total lymphocyte count ↓ (< 800/mm3 reflects undernutrition) T cell proliferation ↓ B lymphocyte proliferation È Cytokine release ↓ (IL2 and IL1) - fever often absent, and inflammatory syndromes have prolonged evolution periods È CD4:CD8 ratio in undernourished patients who are HIV Micronutrient supplementation has been showed to restore T cell deficiency (zinc-thymulin, Vit E -?antioxidant) Usual aging is associated with decrease in skeletal and visceral lean body mass (LBM), bone density, total body water, and increase in total fat SARCOPENIA wasting of skeletal muscle LBM declines 19% in men and 12% in women (2575y) Due to aging, inactivity, malnutrition, catabolic diseases (CHF, COPD, cancer, hyperthyroidism) CACHEXIA is loss of both muscle and fat Not physiologic Occurs in malignancies and HIV disease Systemic inflammatory response Outcomes of Severe Weight Loss in Older Persons Increased hospitalization Increased length of hospital stay Increased hospital costs Delayed recovery from surgery Increased mortality (weight loss in 6 mths in NH pts associated with 2 fold increase in likelihood of death- Yamashita et al. 2002) Increased NH placement in older women (BMI < 21.4 Kg/m2 ) The assessment Case 1 A 73 yr old woman is noted to have a 10 lb involuntary weight loss at her annual physical Food just does not appeal to her and she can’t be bothered with meals; she lives alone She has HTN, osteoarthritis, glaucoma, and T2 diabetes Medications: captopril, metformin, naproxen Exam: unkempt, apathetic, R knee effusion What further questions would you ask? What would you look for in the physical exam? Important points in the history Anorexia? Early satiety? Nausea? Change in bowel habits? Fatigue or apathy? Memory loss? Depression? Food availability? Poverty? Social history Physical signs of Undernutrition Loss of subcutaneous fat - interossei and palmar creases - loss of fullness in arms, chest wall - squared-off appearance of shoulders Muscle wasting (sarcopenia) - loss of tone and bulk in quadriceps, deltoids - reduced strength Edema of ankles, sacrum, and even ascites - absence of weight loss misleading Dysphoria, decreased cognition Poor wound healing, pressure ulcers Parameters Used in Identifying Undernutrition Body weight loss (>5% in 30 days or 10% in 180 days) Body mass index < 19 kg/m2 (may be spuriously elevated) Severe if BMI < 16 Dietary food intake of less than 75% of meals for 3 days Serum albumin value of less than 3.5 or 3.0 g/dl (decreases by 0.8 per decade after age 60) Influenced by posture, CHF, dialysis, cytokines, dialysis, nephrosis, paraproteinemias Serum cholesterol value of less than 160 mg/dl (occurs late, limited use for screening) Associated with hospitalizations, LOS, complications, mortality Screening and Assessments Tools SCALES - outpatient screening tool DETERMINE - a low specificity tool, increases public awareness, and easily performed by the patient - developed by the Nutrition Screening Initiative (AAFP, Am Diet.Assoc, Nat Council of the Aging) - Level I Screen separates those who need evaluation and intervention from those who need other medical and community services - Level II Screen by physician or other primary provider (includes anthropometrics, labs, social and functional testing MNA - Mini Nutritional Assessment. Malnutrition Inflammation Score (dialysis patients) SCALES Protocol for evaluating risk of malnutrition in the elderly (scores > 3 indicates patient at clear risk) Morley 1991 Item evaluated Criterion for 1 point Criterion for 2 points Sadness GDS 10-14 > 15 Cholesterol < 160 mg/dl -- Albumin 3.5 - 4.0 g/dl < 3.5 g/dl Loss of weight (MAC 1 month) 1 kg (or ¼” in MAC 3 kg (or 1/2”) in 6 months) Eating problems assistance Patient needs -- Shopping and food Patient needs prep problems assistance -- Why does caloric intake decrease in the elderly? ALTERATIONS IN THE HEDONIC QUALITIES OF FOOD WITH AGING Food enjoyment depends on taste, odor, temperature, texture, masticatory sounds, all of which are altered Smell declines progressively; hence monotonous diets Alzheimer’s, Parkinsonism, laryngectomy, B12 deficiency, hypothyroidism, RF, cirrhosis, diltiazem, streptomycin Reduction in sensory-specific satiety Increase in taste thresholds; sweet least affected modality; flavor enhanced foods better consumed Difficulty recognizing taste mixtures Social isolation Anorexia of aging- Physiological reduction in food intake with advanced age Food intake is lower in healthy older persons, especially of fat rather than carbohydrates È BMR due to loss of muscle Immobility Greater satiation after a standard meal than younger people Reduced fundic nitric oxide leads to a decrease in adaptive relaxation and earlier satiation (È by leptin, Ç by NPY) Opiod feeding drive (for fats) is less efficient Refeeding can reset appetite Elderly demented patients often eat enough for their diminished energy requirements Hoffer, L J. BMJ 2006;333:1214-1215 Copyright ©2006 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. Some postulated factors involved in the pathogenesis of physiologic anorexia ÀTaste and smell OVARIES Àestrogen ADIPOCYTES ¿leptin CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM ÀDynorphin ÀNeuropeptide Y ¿CART TESTIS Àtestosterone ANOREXIA CYTOKINES TNF α Interleukin-1 Interleukin-6 STOMACH Àadaptive relaxn ¿ Antral stretch DUODENUM ¿cholecystokinin Àmuscle mass WEIGHT LOSS Neurotransmitters and Hormones Involved in the Control of Food Intake (ÈÇ changes with aging) Stimulate Inhibit Peripheral motilin Cholecystokinin Glucagon-like peptide 1 ÇAmylin ghrelin Hormones Thyroid È Testosterone Central Dynorphin neuropeptide Y orexinA Melanin-conc H Cortisol Progestagens Dopamine Norepi Histamine ÈNO Leptin (males only) cytokines È Estrogen (females only) CRH Serotonin Isatin Dopamine Ç CART Stress, Infection Burns, Trauma Increase in Glucocorticoids Mineralocorticoids ADH Decreased IGF1 Gluconeogenesis Protein catabolism Lipolysis Fluid, electrolyte shifts Inc macrophage proliferation Inc release of IL1, TNF Colony stim factor Gamma interferon Protein Energy Malnutrition Hypoalbuminemia Liver dysfunction Decreased host defenses Inc requirement for Cals + protein Pathophysiology of protein-energy malnutrition. Inc ESR Leukocytosis Anorexia Protein catabolism Weight loss “Meals on Wheels”: causes of weight loss M: medications (dig, theophylline, fluoxetine) E: emotional (depression) A: alcohol, anorexia tardive, or elder abuse L: late life paranoia S: swallowing problems (dysphagia, candidiasis, webs) O: oral or dental problems (xerostomia) N: nosocomial infections (TB, C.Diff, H Pylori) W: wandering, dementia problems H: hyperthyroidism, hypercalcemia, hypoadrenalism E: enteric problems (gluten entropathy, pancreatic insufficiency) E: eating problems L: low salt, low fat diets (ADA and other therapeutic diets) S: shopping and food preparation problems Morley Causes of weight loss - MEDICAL Dysgeusia (antibiotics, captopril, tegretol, allopurinol, L dopa, lithium, baclofen, antihistamines, Vit A, zinc deficiency) Anorexia (Addison’s disease, dyspepsia*,H. Pylori infection, hypercalcemia) Oral and swallowing problems, dry mouth, poorly fitting dentures, web stricture, esophageal candidiasis Malabsorption (Celiac disease, intestinal ischemia) Increased metabolism (hyperthyroidism, pheochromocytoma) Metabolic (diabetes, hepatic, renal, cardiac failure) Chronic infections, TB Mixed causes (cancer*, Parkinsonism, COPD, cardiac cachexia) Causes of weight loss - SOCIAL Poverty, fixed income Functional impairment limiting ADL’S, dependancy Social Isolation Elder abuse, caregiver fatigue Poor nutritional knowledge Finicky eaters Alcohol Institutional factors- inadequate assistance Ethnic food preferences Monotony of institutionalized food Causes of weight loss -PSYCHOLOGIC Dementia Depression* Bereavement Alcoholism Late-life mania or paranoia Anorexia tardive or nervosa Sociopathy (loss of locus of control) Excessive burden of life Phobias (cholesterol or choking) Globus hystericus Drug Therapy That May Contribute to Nutritional Disorders Cardiac glycosides (digoxin) Diuretics Anti-inflammatory drugs Antacids (overuse) Psychotropic drugs Antidepressants (SSRI’s) Antineoplastic drugs Anticonvulsants Phenothiazines Oral hypoglycemics Anti-parkinsonian Anticholinergic Alibhai, CMAJ. 2005 March So What is Frailty? A physiologic state of increase vulnerability to stressors that results from decreased physiologic reserves and even dysregulation, of multiple physiologic systems Evidence indicates that Frailty may be a result of alterations in metabolic activity, that then leads to derangement of normal physiology Cytokine over expression Hormonal imbalances Frailty vs. Disability vs. Co morbidity Fried, LP, et al. Journal of Gerontology 2001 M146 – M156 Consequences of Frailty Disability Difficulty with Activities of Daily living Dependency Falls Need for Long – Term Care Mortality Phenotype of Frailty SHRINKING Unintentional weight loss Sarcopenia WEAKNESS POOR ENDURANCE & ENERGY SLOWNESS LOW ACTIVITY FRAILTY: 3 or more criteria PREFRAILTY: 1 or 2 criteria Fried, LP, et al. Journal of Gerontology 2001 M146 – M156 Frailty Syndrome Criteria WEAKNESS Grip strength in the lowest 20% at baseline; adjust for gender and BMI MEN Cutoff for Grip Strength (Kg) criterion for frailty BMI </= 24 BMI 24.1 – 26 BMI 26.1 – 28 BMI > 28 <29 <30 <30 <32 WOMEN Cutoff for Grip Strength (Kg) criterion for frailty BMI </= 23 BMI 23.1 – 26 BMI 26.1 – 29 BMI > 29 <17 <17.3 <18 <21 Aging & Frailty Revised schematic of homeostenosis: The older person employs or consumes physiologic reserves just to maintain homeostasis, and therefore there are fewer reserves available for meeting new challenges Copyright © 2003 Spring-Verlag New York, Inc. All rights reserved. Cycle of Frailty Cytokine Over Expression IL-6, IL-1, TNF-a, IL-2, Hsp70 atherosclerosis anemia PAD, CAD, Cerebrovascular disease Falls, Heart failure… Osteoporosis or osteopenia Cognitive decline Dementia Sarcopenia Fractures Falls Impairments in Function, mobility, and/or endurance FRAILTY Cytokines & Frailty Interleukin -6 (IL-6), TNF-alpha, Heat Shock protein 70: Found to be elevated in older adults who complain of fatigue and found to have poor mobility and poor muscle endurance Bautmans et al. JAGS. 56:3, pgs 389-396 IL-6 found to be elevated in older people with cachexia Hubbard et al. JAGS. 56:2, pgs 279-284 That subclinical anemia may be a related to chronic inflammatory state marked by serum IL-6 elevation Leng et al. JAGS. 50:7, pgs 1268-1271 Hormones & Frailty Hormone Deficient states may lead to the following Growth Hormone, IGF-1 Sarcopenia, Osteoporosis Testosterone Cognitive decline, Depression, Osteoporosis Estrogen * Osteoporosis, Cognitive decline Vitamin D Osteoporosis, Sarcopenia, poor mobility * Replacement not recommended Prevention of Frailty Address Nutrition, Function & Co-morbidities Diabetes Control Stroke prevention CAD, PAD treatment Fall prevention, Physical therapy interventions Exercise Nutritional evaluations Immunizations, Vaccinations F. R. A. I. L. T. Y. Food intake: Maintain nutrition, protein intake, fiber intake In between meal supplements Appetite enhancers such as marinol and megestrol Supplement for any nutritional deficiencies B12, B6, Folate F. R. A. I. L. T. Y. Resistance exercise 3x/ week Resistance with weights or bands builds muscles and helps reduce joint stiffness and pain Exercise has been shown to Increase muscle strength Increase muscle size Increase gait velocity Increase mobility Case 2 A 68 yr old retired accountant is noted to have a 12 lb weight loss at his clinic visit for a diabetic foot ulcer, complicated by chronic osteomyelitis Meal intake reduced by 50%, but he has adequate resources and lives with his wife who is his caregiver. More fatigued and slow. Exam: CBG 209, cheerful, sarcopenia in UE and LE, draining heel wound, How would you manage this patients weight loss? Treatment Strategies Identify cause/causes and initiate targeted dental, medical, psychological, social, or community intervention Thorough evaluation of all prescription and OTC medications Nutrition counseling of patient and caregivers Nutritional supplementation Increased staff at mealtimes, food presentation, taste enhancement, change meal times (not 8-5 PM) Orexigenic drugs Useful non-invasive screening tests Complete blood count Liver function tests (including alkaline phosphatase and bilirubin), measurement of LDH Chest radiography Patients with iron-deficiency anemia or symptoms likely to originate in the gastrointestinal tract, and patients with elevated liver enzyme levels on initial screening, should undergo either endoscopy or UGI series or abdominal ultrasound Identify and treat the cause Despite therapy no increase in weight No cause identified or no treatable condition NUTRITIONAL SUPPORT Frequent small meals high in protein and fat Supplements, night snacks PHYSICAL THERAPY Exercise OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY ? ANABOLIC AGENTS No weight gain Improved prognosis + quality of life Weight gain Consider enteral Hyperalimentation No terminal illlness Pt + family consent Poor prognosis A rational approach to the treatment of weight loss in the elderly. Algorithm for managing weight loss in outpatients NO DEHYDRATION? Treat YES DECREASED FOOD AVAILABILITY? YES NO APPETITE PROBLEM? YES NO DELIRIUM? Treat YES YES Treat MALABSORPTION? YES NO NO DEPRESSION? Treat Refer to social worker HYPERMETABOLISM? NO YES CONSIDER OREXIGENICS LOOK FOR TREATABLE CAUSES ? Malignancy ?other Treat Nutritional supplementation Palatable meals high in protein and fats Give priority to ethnic food preferences Nutritional supplements as meal replacements or late night snacks Liquid energy supplements to swallow medications (Medpass 2.0 can treat weight loss in nursing homes) Begin aggressive efforts to assure adequate intake 48h after acute hospital admission Enteral tube feeding (NG or J tube) has fewer problems, is more cost-effective and efficient than parenteral feeding (TPN) Peripheral parenteral nutrition (PPN) for short term support (10% dextrose, amino acids and intralipid) Calculating enteral feeding requirements Protein* Clinical condition Amount Maintenance 1.2 – 1.5 g/kg/day Stress 1.5 – 2.0 g/kg/day Maintenance 25 – 30 kcal/kg/day Stress 30 – 40 kcal/kg/day Sepsis 40 – 50 kcal/kg/day * Calories# Free water 30 – 35 ml/kg/day *Use IBW in obese persons # Use 120% IBW in obese persons Pharmacological treatment of weight loss Small gain in weight without evidence of decreased morbidity and mortality or improved function and quality of life Orexigenic (appetite-stimulating) and anabolic medications Only 4 have been studied in randomized trials Orexigenic Drugs AGENT MECHANISM OF ACTION Megestrol acetate Progestagen/anticytokine Dronabinol Cannabinoid Cyproheptadine Antiserotonin Anabolic steroids (Oxandrolone) Mainly on muscle Growth Hormone Central Corticosteroids Central Metoclopromide Increased gastric emptying Antidepressants Treat depression (Mirtizapine) 5HT1 agonist, 5HT2 antagonist MEGESTEROL ACETATE Progestational effect antagonizes estrogen (which ↓ food intake) Main effect is antagonism of cytokine production (TNFα, IL6) Increases appetite, weight, well being and fat mass Useful in older persons with anorexia caused by cytokine excess (cancer, AIDS, P ulcers, arthritis, recurrent infections) May cause DVT or adrenal suppression Orexigenic drugs and Their Side Effects Cyproheptadine Testosterone (gel,patch, injection) Oxymethalone/oxandrolone nandrolone Growth hormone Megestrol acetate Dronabinol Delirium Increased Hct Not with prostate Ca Fluid retention Skin irritation Liver dysfunction Renal failure Carpal tunnel syndrome Arthralgias Increased death Deep vein thrombosis hypoadrenalism Delirium Morley. Clin Geriatr Med Nov 2002 Addressing Weight Loss Issues in the Elderly Voluntary Weight Loss Dietary modification required because of OW/OB Weight modification because of diagnosed medical conditions Personal feelings of OW Involuntary Weight Loss Depression (> in LTCF) Cancer Cardiac disorder Alcoholism Benign gastrointestinal diseases Medication Polypharmacy Cognitive impairment Nutrition Assessment is Key Physiologic Anorexia of Aging By the age of 65 years, approximately 50 percent of Americans have lost teeth! Weight loss should NEVER be considered as part of the normal aging process. Nutritional Assessment Anthropometric measures General physical assessment Dietary assessment Self assessment Medication review Environmental scan Treatment Team approach Use of flavor enhancers Small, frequent meals Exercise Medications Feeding tubes Voluntary Weight Loss Issues Planning Exercise ↓ fat usually preferred Small, frequent meals/snacks !!! REMEMBER !!! Eating food is one of life’s greatest pleasures as we mature! QUESTIONS? Naushira Pandya, MD, CMD [email protected] Cecilia Rokusek, EdD, RD [email protected]