Nutrition in Critical Illness: Metabolic Response & Assessment - Stress & Status
- Metabolic Response to Stress:
- Hypermetabolism & severe catabolism.
- ā Cortisol, glucagon, catecholamines; insulin resistance.
- Cytokines (TNF-α, IL-1, IL-6) mediate.
- Phases:
- Ebb (24-48h): Hypometabolism. Goal: Resuscitation.
- Flow: Hypermetabolism, ā catabolism, ā energy needs.
- Nutritional Status Assessment:
- Clinical: Weight loss Hx, muscle wasting.
- Biochemical:
- Serum proteins (albumin, prealbumin): ā by inflammation, unreliable alone.
- Nitrogen balance: $N_{balance} = (Protein_{intake}/6.25) - (UUN + 4)$. Aim positive.
- Energy Expenditure:
- Predictive equations: Often inaccurate.
- RQ = $VCO_2 / VO_2$.
- RQ: ~0.7 fat, ~0.8 protein, ~1.0 carb; >1.0 overfeeding.

- RQ: ~0.7 fat, ~0.8 protein, ~1.0 carb; >1.0 overfeeding.
ā Indirect calorimetry is the gold standard for determining energy expenditure in ICU patients, when available.
Nutrition in Critical Illness: Enteral Nutrition - Gut First Feeds
ā Early enteral nutrition (initiated within 24-48 hours of ICU admission) is preferred over delayed EN or parenteral nutrition in critically ill patients who can tolerate it.
- Principle: "If the gut works, use it!" - preserves gut mucosal barrier, prevents bacterial translocation.
- Timing: Initiate early, within 24-48h of ICU admission, if hemodynamically stable.
- Benefits: ā septic complications, ā MODS, ā ICU stay, cost-effective.
- Access Routes: Nasogastric (NG)/nasojejunal (NJ) short-term; PEG/PEJ for prolonged needs.
- Monitoring Tolerance:
- Clinical: Abdominal distension, pain, bowel sounds, stool.
- GRV: Check q4-6h; >500mL (or 200-500mL + symptoms) ā hold, reassess, prokinetics.
- Complications: Aspiration (HOB 30-45°), diarrhea, tube malposition/clogging.
Nutrition in Critical Illness: Parenteral Nutrition - Veinous Victuals
- Parenteral Nutrition (PN): Intravenous administration of nutrients when the enteral route is contraindicated or insufficient.
- Indications:
- Non-functional GI tract (e.g., prolonged ileus, obstruction, severe shock, high-output fistula).
- Inability to achieve >60% of energy/protein requirements via EN by day 7-10.
ā If enteral nutrition is not feasible or sufficient, parenteral nutrition should be considered cautiously, typically after 7-10 days in patients at low nutritional risk, to avoid overfeeding and complications.
- Timing of Initiation:
- Low nutritional risk: Consider if EN not feasible/sufficient by day 7-10.
- High nutritional risk or severe malnutrition: Initiate early (within 24-48 hours) if EN is not possible.
- Access & Solutions:
- Total PN (TPN): Via central venous catheter; allows hyperosmolar solutions for long-term needs.
- Peripheral PN (PPN): Via peripheral vein; osmolarity limit <900 mOsm/L; for short-term use (<2 weeks).
- Major Complications:
- Catheter-related: Infection (CRBSI), thrombosis, pneumothorax.
- Metabolic: Hyperglycemia, refeeding syndrome, electrolyte disturbances, PN-Associated Liver Disease (PNALD).

- Monitoring: Blood glucose, electrolytes, LFTs, triglycerides.
Nutrition in Critical Illness: Monitoring & Complications - Watchful & Wise
- Vigilant Monitoring:
- Clinical: GI tolerance (N/V/D), fluid status.
- Biochemical: Glucose (target 140-180 mg/dL), electrolytes (PO4, K, Mg - daily if risk), TGs.
- Potential Complications:
- Refeeding Syndrome: ā ļø Severe āPO4, āK, āMg (š P K Mg: Phosphate, Kalium, Magnesium). Risk in severely malnourished.
- Initiate feeding low, advance slowly.
- Overfeeding: Hyperglycemia, āCO2 production, hepatic steatosis.
- Underfeeding: Weakness, poor healing, āinfection risk.
- GI intolerance: Diarrhea, high GRV.
- Refeeding Syndrome: ā ļø Severe āPO4, āK, āMg (š P K Mg: Phosphate, Kalium, Magnesium). Risk in severely malnourished.
ā Refeeding syndrome, characterized by severe hypophosphatemia, hypokalemia, and hypomagnesemia, is a critical complication to monitor for when initiating nutrition in severely malnourished patients.
HighāYield Points - ā” Biggest Takeaways
- Early Enteral Nutrition (EN) within 24-48 hours is superior to Parenteral Nutrition (PN).
- Target calories: 25-30 kcal/kg/day; Target protein: 1.2-2.0 g/kg/day.
- Immunonutrition (e.g., arginine, glutamine) benefits select critically ill patients.
- Prevent Refeeding Syndrome: monitor for hypophosphatemia, hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia.
- Permissive underfeeding or trophic feeding is often an initial strategy.
- Gastric Residual Volume (GRV) monitoring is de-emphasized; focus on clinical intolerance.
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