Kategorien: Alle - nutrition - complications - survival - obesity

von peyton lawrence Vor 9 Jahren

791

obesity paradox 2

The relationship between obesity and surgical outcomes presents a complex scenario often referred to as the "obesity paradox." Traditional views link obesity to increased anaesthetic and surgical complications, such as thromboembolic events, wound sepsis, and cardiovascular issues.

obesity paradox 2

SURGICAL NUTRITION Peyton Lloyd Lawrence

SUPPORT STRATEGIES

principle

- supply caloric requirement to preserve lean mass, promote good
immunologic function and wound healing WHILST AVOIDING
OVERFEEDING

QUANTITY objectively - depends on total caloric requirement determined by assessment (BMR, REE, direct) rough estimates - maintenance = 25-30kca/kg/dy weight gain- 30-40kcal/kg/day principle for TPN mixing - minus protein contribution from total caloric requirement and make up the rest with DW and Lipid usually in a 20:50:30 ratio (pro:carb:fat)
QUALITY -EN - Gastric+ Duodenal - bolus non elemental feed, Slow - Jejunal - elemental- (no brush border enteropeptidases to monomers) - Dx specific e.g. Glucerna - DM; Nepro- CKD; Vivonex - Burns - Immune enhancing - Oxepro; Crucial
PN - 2 in 1, 3 in 1 mixes or single (varying concentrations) - immune enhancing - incr glutamine; arginine - antinflammatory - omega 3 (eicospantaeoate) instead of omega 6 (linoleiate) based Townsend, Courtney M. Jr, Beauchamp, Daniel R; Evers, Mark B and Mattox, Kenneth L 2010. Sabiston Textbook of Surgery. 19th ed. Canada: Elsevier
COMMENCEMENT TIME (early vs delayed) Early usually preferred Optimise to anabolic state before surgery Preop weight loss 0f 10-20% intentional for obese pts Early postop - fast track surgery Early enteral even in Pancreatitis Townsend, Courtney M. Jr, Beauchamp, Daniel R; Evers, Mark B and Mattox, Kenneth L 2010. Sabiston Textbook of Surgery. 19th ed. Canada: Elsevier
ROUTE (EN vs PN) Enteral preferred - more physiologic:- - prevents mucosal atrophy = prevents bacterial translocation - propagates Portal circulation and hepatic function *Blind/ Endoscopic (<4/52) or Surgical (>4/52) Parenteral- only if EN is contraindicated or insufficient to handle requirements.

OBESITY PARADOX

TRADITIONAL THOUGHTS Obesity associated with: - increased Anaesthetic and Surgical complications e.g. Thromboembolic phenom; Wound sepsis and cardiovascular events weight loss confers benefits of decreased incidence of metabolic syndrome and bertter perioperative outcome Sjöström, L., Lindroos, A.K., Peltonen, M., et al. (2004) Lifestyle, diabetes, and cardiovascular risk factors 10 years aft er bariatric surgery. New England Journal of Medicine , 351 , 2683–93.
ref [3], [4] [19]

paradox is not well understood but thought that
obese states confer more physiological reserves for
times of hypermetabolic demand

Survival

Conclusion Appproach to nutrition in the perioperative is evolving as our understanding of Claude Bernard's internal milieu (homeostasis) grows. The results seen in fast track surgery and the observations of the Obesity Paradox substantiate the views that "a little extra physiological reserves" confers a mortality advantage!

References 1. Townsend, Courtney M. Jr, Beauchamp, Daniel R; Evers, Mark B and Mattox, Kenneth L 2010. Sabiston Textbook of Surgery. 19th ed. Canada: Elsevier 2. Sjöström, L., Lindroos, A.K., Peltonen, M., et al. (2004) Lifestyle, diabetes, and cardiovascular risk factors 10 years aft er bariatric surgery. New England Journal of Medicine , 351 , 2683–93. 3. Fonarow GC, Srikanthan P, Costanzo MR, Cintron GB, Lopatin M. ADHERE Scientific Advisory Committee and Investigators. An obesity paradox in acute heart failure: analysis of body mass index and inhospital mortality for 108,927 patients in the Acute Decompensated Heart Failure National Registry. Am Heart J. 2007;153:74–81. 4. Uretsky S, Messerli FH, Bangalore S, Champion A, Cooper-DeHoff RM, ZhouQ, et al. Obesity paradox in patients with hypertension and coronary artery disease. Am J Med. 2007;120:863–70. 5. Doehner W, Erdmann E, Cairns R, Clark AL, Dormandy JA, Ferrannini E, Anker SD. Inverse relation of body weight and weight change with mortality and morbidity in patients with type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular co-morbidity: an analysis of the PROactive study population. Int J Cardiol. 2011. doi:10.1016/j. ijcard.2011.09.039.

ASSESSMENT

PRINCIPLE IS IDENTIFYING MALNUTRITION THEN,
CLASSIFYING TYPE AND STRATIFYING SEVERITY,
WITH THE VIEW TO DEVICE AN APPROPRIATE SUPPORT STRATEGY

CALORIMETRY 1. Energy expenditure equations BMR - HARRIS BENEDICT, Stressed state = CURRERI- GALVESTON e.g.Burns pts) 2. Resting energy Expenditure = (RQ from ventilator) 3. DIRECT-using calorimeter Townsend, Courtney M. Jr, Beauchamp, Daniel R; Evers, Mark B and Mattox, Kenneth L 2010. Sabiston Textbook of Surgery. 19th ed. Canada: Elsevier
BLOOD - serum proteins (Alb, Transferrin, Prealbumin, RBP) - TLC (%lymph / WBC) - CBC , U&E NITROGEN BALANCE = N(g) intake minus 24hr UN
BODY COMPOSITION ASSAY - Dual Xray ABsorptiometry compares differential tissue xray absorption to standardised norms - gives relative values for lean mass, fat and bone Townsend, Courtney M. Jr, Beauchamp, Daniel R; Evers, Mark B and Mattox, Kenneth L 2010. Sabiston Textbook of Surgery. 19th ed. Canada: Elsevier
ANTHROPOMETRY 1. WEIGHT MEASURES- % wgt loss, BMI, IBW 2. SKIN FOLD THICKNESS - MAC, TSF
CLINICAL HISTORY - Weight and dietary changes over time - Catabolic factors (comorbidity, Rx, recent stress, GI disease, Anorexia nervosa or bulimia) - Anabolic factors (insulin / GH use, eating disorder, family hx or genetic mutation- leptin and melancortin-r)
PHYSICAL EXAM - General- wasting + mucocutaneous lesions - Specific: abdomen, cardiopulmonary Townsend, Courtney M. Jr, Beauchamp, Daniel R; Evers, Mark B and Mattox, Kenneth L 2010. Sabiston Textbook of Surgery. 19th ed. Canada: Elsevier