Nutritional Assessment & Needs - Fuel Gauge Check
- Screening: MUST, NRS-2002 identify at-risk patients.
- Assessment (ABCD):
- Anthropometry: BMI, triceps skinfold, MAC.
- Biochemical:
- Albumin < 3.5 g/dL (chronic, t½ 20d).
- Prealbumin < 15-20 mg/dL (acute, t½ 2-3d).
- Transferrin < 200 mg/dL (t½ 8-10d).
- TLC < 1500/mm³.
- Clinical: >10% weight loss/6mo, muscle wasting, edema.
- Dietary: Intake recall.
- Daily Needs Estimation:
- Energy: 25-35 kcal/kg (Harris-Benedict for BEE).
- Protein: 1.2-2.0 g/kg (↑ in stress).
- Fluid: 30-35 mL/kg.
⭐ Exam-favourite fact: Prealbumin (half-life 2-3 days) is a more sensitive indicator of acute nutritional changes than albumin (half-life 20 days).
Metabolic Response to Surgery - Stress Storm Surge
- Ebb Phase (Initial Shock): ~12-24h post-insult.
- ↓ Metabolic rate, ↓ temperature, ↓ $O_2$ consumption.
- Hormonal surge: ↑ Catecholamines, ↑ Cortisol, ↑ Glucagon.
- Goal: Conserve energy, maintain perfusion.
- Flow Phase (Catabolic): Days to weeks.
- Hypermetabolism (↑ Basal Metabolic Rate 1.5-2x), ↑ temperature, ↑ $O_2$ consumption.
- Features: Protein catabolism (negative nitrogen balance), hyperglycemia (insulin resistance), ↑ lipolysis.
- Hormonal: Sustained ↑ Cortisol, ↑ Glucagon.
⭐ The 'flow' phase of metabolic stress is characterized by hypermetabolism, hyperglycemia, ↑ cortisol, ↑ glucagon, and significant protein catabolism.
- Anabolic Phase (Recovery):
- Protein repletion, positive nitrogen balance, tissue repair.

Enteral Nutrition - Tube Feed Triumph
"If the gut works, use it!" - Preserves gut integrity, ↓ bacterial translocation.
- Principle: Preferred route if GI tract is functional.
⭐ Early EN (within 24-48 hours) in critically ill/post-op patients ↓ septic complications & ICU stay.
- Indications:
- Unable to meet nutritional needs orally (e.g., dysphagia, major trauma, burns, critical illness).
- Functional & accessible GI tract.
- Access Routes:
- Short-term (<4-6 weeks): Nasogastric (NG), Nasoduodenal (ND), Nasojejunal (NJ).
- Long-term (>4-6 weeks): Gastrostomy (PEG), Jejunostomy (PEJ).
- Contraindications:
- Complete mechanical intestinal obstruction, paralytic ileus.
- Severe shock, intestinal ischemia, bowel perforation.
- High-output enterocutaneous fistula (>500 mL/day) not bypassable distally.
- Severe intractable vomiting/diarrhea.
- Complications:
- Aspiration pneumonia (⚠️ Elevate Head of Bed 30-45°).
- GI: Diarrhea, cramping, bloating, nausea/vomiting.
- Mechanical: Tube displacement, occlusion, erosion.
- Metabolic: Refeeding syndrome, electrolyte imbalance.

Parenteral Nutrition - IV Lifeline Logic
- Indications: Non-functional GI tract > 7 days (or < 7 days if severe malnutrition). E.g., short bowel, severe pancreatitis, prolonged ileus.
- Types:
- TPN (Total): Central line; high osmolality (> 900 mOsm/L); for long-term.
- PPN (Peripheral): Peripheral vein; lower osmolality (< 900 mOsm/L); short-term (< 2 weeks), supplemental.
- Components: Dextrose ($3.4 \text{ kcal/g}$), amino acids ($4 \text{ kcal/g}$), lipids ($9 \text{ kcal/g}$ or $1.1-2 \text{ kcal/mL}$ for IVFE). Vitamins, minerals.
- Complications:
- Metabolic: Hyperglycemia, electrolyte shifts.
⭐ Refeeding syndrome: Hallmark is severe hypophosphatemia (📌 Phosphate Plummets); monitor PO4.
- Catheter: Infection, thrombosis.
- Hepatic: Steatosis, cholestasis (long-term).
- Monitoring: Glucose, electrolytes (K, PO4, Mg), LFTs, triglycerides.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Pre-operative nutritional status (albumin, weight loss) strongly predicts post-operative outcomes.
- Early EN preferred over PN: maintains gut integrity, reduces sepsis.
- Immunonutrition (arginine, glutamine) may benefit select major GI surgery patients.
- Beware refeeding syndrome in severely malnourished; monitor electrolytes (K, PO4, Mg).
- Initiate nutrition support if oral intake inadequate >7 days or anticipated.
- Goals: 25-30 kcal/kg/day calories, 1.2-1.5 g/kg/day protein.
- PN for: non-functional gut, prolonged ileus, or high-output fistulas.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app