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Nutritional support in nicu/picu
Lecturer: Hengame Shariati Rad Registered Dietitian September 2016
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Goals of nutrition To achieve a postnatal growth at a rate that approximates the same post-conceptional age Provide balance in fluid homeostasis and electrolytes Avoid imbalance in macro-nutrients Provide micro-nutrients and vitamins
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Fetal nutrition Parenteral (mostly) Stores are laid late in gestation
At 28 weeks, a fetus has: 20% of term calcium and phosphorus stores 20% of term fat stores About a quarter of term glycogen stores
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Adaptation to nutrition after birth
Gut adaptation is regulated by Endocrine factors Intraluminal factors Breast milk hormones and growth factors Bacteria
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Normal output Daily stool and urine output guidance
1 wet nappy and meconium at least once a day Day 0 2 wet nappies and meconium at least once a day Day 1 3 or 4 wet nappies and changing stools at least once a day Day 2 & 3 5 or 6 heavy wet nappies and yellow stools at least once a day Day 4+ A baby who is passing meconium at 3 or 4 days old may not be getting enough milk A baby who does not have yellow stools by day 5 may not be getting enough milk A baby who is not doing as many wet nappies each day as expected may not be getting enough milk
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Nutrition for the preterm or sick baby
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Early vs late feeding Early feeders had:
Fewer days parenteral nutrition fewer investigations for sepsis No difference in: NEC Weight gain
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Rapid vs slow increase Rapid: 20 to 35 ml/kg/day
Slow: 10 to 20 ml/kg/day Rapid group: Reached full enteral feeds and regained birthweight faster No difference in NEC rate or length of stay
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Minimal enteral nutrition
12 to 24 ml/kg/day for 5 to 10 days MEN group: Faster to full enteral feeds Shorter length of stay No difference in NEC
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Probiotics for preventing nec
Reduced risk of: NEC Death Achieved full feeds faster No difference in rates of sepsis
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Feeding small or preterm infants:choices
Human milk Mother’s own Banked donor milk Fortified Artificial Term formula Preterm formula Parenteral Nutrition
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Parenteral nutrition
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Parenteral nutrition If an infant can’t, won’t or shouldn’t be fed enterally What’s in the bag? Fluid Carbohydrate Protein Fat Minerals and Trace elements
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energy Requirements: kcal/kg/day Basal metabolic rate 40
Physical activity specific dynamic action of food 10% Thermoregulation variable Growth
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protein With glucose infusion alone, infants lose 1-2% of endogenous protein stores daily 1g/kg/day gives protein balance 2.5 to 3.5 g/kg/day allows accretion nb energy requirement Safe to start soon after birth
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fat Energy source Essential fatty acids source( intralipid)
Cell uptake and utilization of free fatty acids is deficient in preterm infants Start at max 1g/kg/day, increasing gradually to 3g/kg/day (less if septic)
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risks of pn Benefits of pn
Earlier and faster weight gain Avoidance of problems associated with enteral feeds Line associated sepsis Line associated complication( eg thrombosis) Hyperammonaemia Hyperchloraemic acidosis Cholestatic jaundice (Liver dysfunction and renal overload)
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Milk feeds
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Human milk advantages Protection from NEC Improved host defences
Protection from allergy and aczema Faster tolerance of full enteral feeds Better developmental and intellectual outcome
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Human milk shortcomings if preterm
Human milk may not provide enough Protein Energy Sodium Calcium, Phosphorus and Magnesium Trace elements( Fe, Cu, Zn) Vitamins( B2, B6, Folic acid, C, D, E, K)
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Breast milk fortifiers
Improved Short term growth Nutrition Retention Bone mineralization Concerns: Trend towards increased NEC
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Term vs preterm formulas
Term formulas do not provide for preterm protein, calcium, sodium and phosphate requirements, even at high volumes Term formula( vs preterm formula) fed infants . grow more slowly . have lower developmental score and IQ at follow up
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Feeding preterm infants: aim
To provide nutrient intakes that permit the rate of postnatal growth and the composition of weight gain to approximate that of a normal fetus of the same gestational age, without producing metabolic stress
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Catch-up growth Enhanced nutritional intake sufficient to allow “catch-up” growth improves long term neurodevelopmental outcome Compared to term infants, ex-preterm infants fed at 120 kcal/kg/day Have more body fat Have a different fat distribution
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Nutritional assessment
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How best to assess growth & nutrition ?
Weight Reflects mass of lean body tissue, fat, intra- and extra- cellular fluid compartments Length More accurately reflects lean tissue mass Head circumference Correlates well with overall growth and developmental achievement
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Laboratory assessment
TPN requires regular monitoring of acid base status, liver function, bone profile and electrolytes In enterally fed infants, monitoring albumin, transferrin, total protein, urea, alkaline phosphatase and phosohate may be useful
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Methods of feeding Oral feeding >32 weeks respiration<60-80
try 20 minutes Naso-gastric (NG) feeding bolus NG feeding continuous Trans-pyloric Gastrostomy feeding
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Trophic feeding Keeping infant fasting (NPO)
.decrease in intestinal mass .decrease in mucosal enzyme .increase in gut permeability Trophic feeding: .small amount of feeding to prepare the intestine .release enteric hormones, better tolerance to feed
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Growth goals Weight: g/day Length: ~1 cm/week HC: cm/week
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Caloric requirements for growth
Preterm goal: ~120 kcal/kg/day Term goal: ~110 kcal/kg/day Total fluid of enteral feeds required to deliver adequate calories for growth is ~150 cc/kg/day
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tpn Determine fluid requirement for first day:
full term: ml/kg/day late preterm & preterm infants(30-37 weeks): 80 ml/kg/day very-preterm infants: ml/kg/day Determine gluose infusion rate(GIR); GIR: (%dextrose. IV rate) / (6. wt in kg) calculated GIR from known dextrose concentration(%)
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tpn Protein and amino acids goal for premature infants: 4g/kg/day
goal for term infants: 3 g/kg/day source: trophamine Other added nutrients: lipids cystein phosphorous magnesium trace minerals heparin MVI
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ENTERAL NUTRITION Breast milk is best
The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends breastfeeding for the first year of life Started when an infant is clinically stable Breast milk and standard infant formula have 20kcal/30cc Trophic tube feeds may be continuous or bolus and advanced gradually (10-20 ml/kg/day) Transition to bolus from continuous typically begins after achieving full feeds PO feeds typically attempted around weeks, when develop suck and swallow coordination Premies are often supplements with TPN as they work up on feeds
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Biochemestric in picu 20% decreasing in Mg 25% increasing in TG
30% increasing in urea 52% decreasing in Albumin ↑ uremia→↓ SD scores for weight & arm circumferance between admission and discharge ↑ TG→>ventilator dependence days & length of stay
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Unique nutritional aspects of the vlbw infants
Higher rate of protein synthesis & turnover Greater oxygen consumption during growth Higher energy cost due to transepidermal water loss Higher rate of fat deposition Prone to hyperglycemia Higher total body water content
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Early attachment Skin to skin contact may strengthen the mother-infant dyad and lead to longer breastfeeding periods over the first two years of life Non-nutritive breastfeeding can stimulate milk volume and imprive breastfeeding success rates
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Best practice Infants should be transitioned from gavage to oral feedings when physiologically capable, not based on arbitrary weight or gestational age criteria.
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