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Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy Session 4

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Page 1: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy

Session 4

Page 2: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

After completing this session, participants will be able to:

• Identify and manage complications associated with enteral nutrition therapy

Objectives

Page 3: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

Categories of Complications Associated with Tube Feeding

Potential complicatons

Potential complicatons

Mechanical Mechanical Pulmonary aspiration Pulmonary aspiration

Metabolic Metabolic

Gastrointestinal Gastrointestinal

Page 4: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

Nasoenteric feeding tube

Gastrostomy feeding tube

• Use tubes made with biocompatible materials

• Do not use rubber, latex or polyvinyl chloride tubes

• Use appropriate tube size Small-bore for nasoenteric tubes

• ~8-10 French size

Gavi S, et al. Ann Long-Term Care 2008;16:28-32.

Mechanical Complications Prevent Irritation/Infection at Tube Site

Page 5: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

• Properly tape the tube to reduce risk of Formula infusion in

esophagus, pharynx, larynx, or nasal cavity

Bronchial aspiration

Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Critical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott Nutrition, Abbott Laboratories, 1994.

Seder CW, et al. Nutr Clin Pract 2008;23:651-654.

Mechanical Complications Prevent Tube Migration

Page 6: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

Use slide 11, session 8 TNT 3.0

Mechanical Complications Properly Inflate Balloon

Page 7: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

Use slide 12, session 8 TNT 3.0

American Gastroenterological Association. Gastroenterology 1995;108:1280-1281.

Mechanical Complications Properly Position External Skin Disks

Page 8: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

• Routine irrigation with clear water or saline

• Do not use fruit juice or carbonated beverages

• Always use a syringe >30 cc during tube care

Feeding tube ruptured from excessive pressure applied by small syringe

Mechanical Complications Maintain Tube Patency

Page 9: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

• Elevate the head of the bed 30° to 45° • Provide good oral care • Regularly assess tube feeding

tolerance and tube position • Provide tight glycemic control • Correct electrolyte abnormalities • Minimize narcotic dosage • Use continuous rather than intermittent feeding • Feed beyond the ligament of Treitz

McClave SA, et al. JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr 2002;26(6 Suppl):S80-S85.

Pulmonary Aspiration Can Be Lethal Use Aspiration Precautions

Page 10: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

• Do not discontinue enteral feeding for GRV <500 mL

• GRV >500 mL: Withhold feeding

• GRV >200 mL on two successive assessments: Withhold feeding

• GRV threshold >250 mL: Use a protocol-driven approach

Pulmonary Aspiration Is Monitoring Gastric Residual Volume (GRV) Helpful?

McClave SA, et al. Crit Care Clin 2010;26:451-466. McClave SA, et al. JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr 2009;33:277-316.

Update of the Canadian Clinical Practice Guidelines for Nutrition Support in Mechanically Ventilated, Critically Ill Adult Patients. www.criticalcarenutrition.com/docs/cpg/srrev.pdf.

Page 11: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

• GI motor dysfunction • Admission diagnoses (eg, burns, head injury,

sepsis, and multiple trauma) • Age of the patient • GI conditions • Medications Sedatives, analgesics and vasopressor agents

delay gastric emptying Hyperosmolar medications such as sorbitol can cause

osmotic diarrhea

• GI disuse atrophy

Deane A, et al. World J Gastroenterol 2007;13:3909-3917. Magnuson BL, et al. Nutr Clin Pract 2005;20:618-624.

Wohlt PD, et al. Am J Health Syst Pharm 2009;66:1458-1467. Beckwith MC, et al. Hosp Pharm 2004;39:225-237.

Gastrointestinal (GI) Complications Non-formula Etiologies

Page 12: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

McClave SA, et al. JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr 2009;33:277-316. Update of the Canadian Clinical Practice Guidelines for Nutrition Support in Mechanically

Ventilated, Critically Ill Adult Patients. www.criticalcarenutrition.com/docs/cpg/srrev.pdf. Kreymann KG, et al. Clin Nutr 2006;25:210-223.

Manage Non-formula Etiologies Gastrointestinal (GI) Complications

Etiology • GI motor dysfunction • Admission diagnoses

(eg, burns, head injury, sepsis, and multiple trauma)

• Aging • GI conditions

Management • Consider prokinetic

agents and postpyloric feeding

• Consider an oligomeric, peptide-based enteral formula

Page 13: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

Manage Non-formula Etiologies Gastrointestinal (GI) Complications

Etiology • Medications

Management • Consult with a pharmacist

Page 14: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

Manage Non-formula Etiologies Gastrointestinal (GI) Complications

McClave SA, et al. JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr 2009;33:277-316.

Etiology • GI disuse atrophy

Management • Rule out C. difficile

infection, treat diarrhea • Continue to feed

enterally Consider a soluble fiber-

supplemented formula

• Consider supplemental parenteral nutrition

Page 15: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

• Malabsorption of formula components

Fat, intact protein, lactose

• Hyperosmolar formulas

• Rapid formula delivery

• Microbiological contamination

Formula-related Etiologies Gastrointestinal (GI) Complications

Deane A, et al. World J Gastroenterol 2007;13:3909-3917.

Page 16: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

Manage Formula-related Etiologies Gastrointestinal (GI) Complications

Etiology • Malabsorption of

formula components

Management • Consider formulas

designed to enhance tolerance

• Avoid lactose

American Gastroenterological Association. Gastroenterology 1995;108:1280-1281.

Page 17: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

Manage Formula-related Etiologies Gastrointestinal (GI) Complications

Etiology • Hyperosmolar

formulas

• Rapid formula delivery

Management • Use full-strength

formulas Do not dilute formula

• Reduce the formula flow rate initially and advance as tolerated

• Use an enteral feeding pump

American Gastroenterological Association. Gastroenterology 1995;108:1280-1281.

Page 18: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

Bankhead R, et al. JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr 2009;33:122-167.

Manage Formula-related Etiologies Gastrointestinal (GI) Complications

Etiology • Microbiological

contamination

Management • Safely handle formula

during preparation and administration

Page 19: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

• Maintain safe formula hangtime 8 hours for open systems ≤4 hours for reconstituted powder formulas 24–48 hours for prefilled containers

• Avoid excessive handling and formula manipulation

• Do not add substances to formula

Manage Formula-related Etiologies Gastrointestinal (GI) Complications

Bankhead R, et al. JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr 2009;33:122-167.

Page 20: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

• Serum electrolytes • Blood glucose • Blood urea nitrogen • Serum creatinine • Calcium • Phosphorus

• Magnesium • Liver enzymes • Vital signs • Body weight • Feeding tolerance

Metabolic Monitoring Metabolic Complications

Russell MK. Monitoring complications of enteral feedings. In Charney P, Malone A (eds.). ADA Pocket Guide To Enteral Nutrition. Chicago, The American Dietetic Assoication, 2006. pp. 155-192.

Page 21: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

• Provide antioxidant vitamins and trace elements to all patients receiving specialized nutrition therapy

• Aggressively replete phosphorus, magnesium, and potassium to prevent refeeding syndrome

McClave SA, et al. JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr 2009;33:277-316. Boateng AA, et al. Nutrition 2010;26:156-167.

Ensure Adequate Provision of Vitamins and Minerals Metabolic Complications

Page 22: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

• Caused by rapidly advancing feeding in malnourished patients

• Characterized by Hypophosphatemia Hypokalemia Hypomagnesemia Fluid overload

• Anticipate it and correct fluid and electrolyte deficiencies before starting feeding

• Slowly advance feeding rate

Prevent Refeeding Syndrome

Page 23: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

• Anticipation is key Correct pre-existing electrolyte abnormalities

• Initiate nutrition repletion slowly Initiate hypocaloric feeds

• (10-20 kcal/kg actual weight) Gradually increase feeding rate

over first week

Prevent Refeeding Syndrome

Boateng AA, et al. Nutrition 2010;26:156-167.

Page 24: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

Normoglycemia in Intensive Care Evaluation and Survival Using Glucose Algorithm Regulation (NICE-SUGAR)

• Intensive glucose control (81-108 mg/dL; 4.5-6.0 mmol/L)

Increased mortality

Increased risk of hypoglycemia

Glycemic control to ~150 mg/dL (8.3 mmol/L) is safer for critically ill patients

The NICE-SUGAR Study Investigators. N Engl J Med 2009;360:1283-1297. Reeds D. Curr Opin Gastroenterol 2010;26:152-155.

Hyperglycemia is Common in Critically Ill Patients Metabolic Complications

Page 25: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

“Sliding-scale insulin as monotherapy generally is ineffective and may be harmful.”

Thompson CL et al. Diabetes Spectrum 2005;18:20-27.

Intensive Insulin Therapy Sliding-scale Insulin (Basal Low-frequency dose)

6 am 12 pm 6 pm 12 pm

Hypo

Sliding-scale Insulin By Itself is Not Effective Therapy

Page 26: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

• Insulin is the most appropriate agent • Use continuous IV infusion for critically

ill patients • Use scheduled subcutaneous

basal-bolus insulin regimens for non-critically ill patients

• Avoid hypoglycemia • Insulin analogs are preferred • Sliding-scale insulin regimens are not

effective

Moghissi ES. Curr Med Res Opin 2010;26:589-598.

Best Use of Insulin for Glycemic Management

Page 27: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

• Initiate insulin therapy for persistent hyperglycemia, starting at a threshold of not >180 mg/dL (10.0 mmol/L)

• Maintain blood glucose 140 – 180 mg/dL (7.8 – 10.0 mmol/L)

• Lower targets may be appropriate in select patients, but not <110 mg/dL

• IV insulin infusion adjusted according to validated protocols with demonstrated safety and efficacy is preferred

• Monitor glucose frequently to achieve optimal glucose control

Moghissi ET, et al. Diabetes Care 2009;32:1119-1131.

Recommendations for Optimal Glucose Control for Critically Ill Patients

Page 28: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

Variable CRS IIT

Insulin (P <0.05)

2 units daily

52 units of regular insulin daily

Median blood glucose

(P <0.05)

144 mg/dL (8 mmol/L)

133.6 mg/dL (7.4 mmol/L)

Hypoglycemia (P <0.001)

6 (3.5%) 27 (16%)

de Azevedo JRA et al. J Crit Care 2010;25:84-85.

Comparison of Intensive Insulin Therapy (IIT) to Carbohydrate-Restrictive Strategy (CRS)

Page 29: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

Nutritional Complications

Research Objective: Describe the prognostic impact of nutritional status on 6-month mortality

Subjects: 165 older-adult patients hospitalized for an acute event

Results: Nutritional status is associated with 6-month mortality and persists after adjusting for sex, age, comorbidity, and functional status

Clinical Application: Strategic nutrition therapy during hospitalization and following discharge can positively affect long-term outcomes.

Expaulella J, et al. Age Ageing 2007;30:407-413.

Increased Mortality Seen in Spanish Study

Page 30: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

“FASTHUG” Clinical Checklist Focusing On: • Feeding • Analgesia • Sedation • Thromboembolic prophylaxis • Head-of-the-bed elevation • Stress ulcer prophylaxis • Glycemic control

Johns RH, et al. Postgrad Med J 2010:86:541-551. Vincent JL. Crit Care Med 2005;33:1225-1229.

Provide Strategic Nutrition Therapy

Page 31: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott

• Enteral nutrition therapy is associated with complications, but they are largely preventable and can be managed

• Complications associated with enteral nutrition therapy are categorized as mechanical, gastrointestinal, and metabolic

• Appropriate and strategic nutrition therapy is key to improving long-term outcomes for patients

Key Concepts

Page 32: Monitoring Complications of Enteral Nutrition Therapy€¦ · Pendley F, et al. Enteral Nutrition Support in Cr itical Care: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. Columbus, Ohio, Abbott