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Nutrition in the Neonate

Nutrition in the Neonate. Importance of Nutrition in Early Life. Critical periods in fetal and neonatal life which may result in long lasting effects in adulthood Examples:

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Nutrition in the Neonate

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  1. Nutrition in the Neonate

  2. Importance of Nutrition in Early Life • Critical periods in fetal and neonatal life which may result in long lasting effects in adulthood • Examples: • Inverse relationship between Birth weight and mortality from coronary artery disease as adult. Infants < 5.5lbs have 2x risk of cardiac mortality & hypertension vs 8-9lb. Infants >9lb increased cardiovascular risk and obesity. • Breast feeding resulting in lower cholesterol levels and lower systolic blood pressure, and protective against childhood obesity

  3. Gastrointestinal Tract in Premature Infant • Intestinal tract elongates 1000x during 5-40 weeks gestation- doubles in length during last 15 weeks to 275 cms at birth. • Fetal swallowing: 450ml/day in 3rd trimester. Fluid includes growth factors. Availability interrupted by premature birth • Gastro-esophageal tone is decreased • Motility is delayed

  4. Nutrition Requirements • Growth rate after birth is much slower than in-utero • Undernourished at a vulnerable time • Protein and energy must be provided in appropriate proportion for optimal utilization of each • Nutrient intakes must meet needs for deposition and replacement of ongoing losses • Protein is continuously lost via skin as desquamated cells and as urea • Resting metabolic rate is increased with prematurity, disease states, and low birth weight

  5. Neonatal Energy Form of Energy Caloric Expenditure Resting Metabolic Rate* 50 kcal/kg/day Activity 15 kcal/kg/day Cold Stress 10 kcal/kg/day Nutrition Processing 50 kcal/kg/day Total 120 kcal/kg/day

  6. Nutrition Requirements- Carbohydrates • Primary energy substrate for brain metabolism • Hepatic glycogen content is limited • Gluconeogenesis (production of glucose from amino acids and lipid oxidation) is large contributor to glucose production • Glucose regulatory hormones and enzymes are not fully developed • Increased risk for hypoglycemia • Hyperglycemia: exceeding normal glucose turnover rates; stress; relative insulin deficiency; hepatic peripheral insulin resistance

  7. Nutrition Requirements- Lipids • Source of essential Fatty Acids and LCPUFA • Linoleic and linolenic acid comprise cell membranes • LC-PUFA (AA & DHA) important for brain and retinal development • Energy substrate readily utilized by VLBW • Decreases amino acid oxidation and protein breakdown when lipid provides 50% of non-protein calories • Provides greater energy and is isotonic compared to high concentration dextrose

  8. Benefits of Early Parenteral Nutriton • Provides nutritional support and supplements enteral feedings as the gut is adapts and matures • Greater weight, length, and head circumference percentiles at discharge • Improved long term neurodevelopmental outcome

  9. Indications for TPN • Prematurity < 1500 grams • GI anomalies or surgery • Feeding intolerance / ileus • Necrotizing enterocolitis • Cardiac disease • Chronic diarrhea • Pulmonary disease • Severe asphyxia

  10. Benefits of Early Enteral Nutrition • Stimulates gut maturation • Increases gut hormone release • Improves gut motility • Prevents gut atrophy • Decreased release of proinflammatory mediators • Shortens time to achieving full feedings • Decreases length of hospitalization • Does not lead to an increased incidence of NEC

  11. Feeding Premature Infants • Birth Weight 500–1250g: Start at 10-20 mL/kg/d x 3-5 days, then increase by 10-20 mL/kg/day • Birth Weight 1250g up to gestation 34 6/7 wks: Start at 20-30 mL/kg/d x 1 day, then Increase by 20-30 mL/kg/d. Note that nippling babies may be advanced more quickly • Gestation > 35 wks: Treat as full term • For all weights: • Change to 22 kcal/oz at 80 mL/kg/d • Change to 24 kcal/oz at 100 mL/kg/d • Consider making no volume increases on days when caloric density changed • D/C IL at 100-120 mL/kg/d • D/C HA and DL at 120 mL/kg/d

  12. Advantages of Human Milk for VLBW Infants • Quality of protein • Trophic effects on the developing GI tract • Rapid gastric emptying • Human milk Lipase • LCPUFA

  13. Nutritional Goals • Provide sufficient energy and nitrogen to prevent catabolism and to achieve positive nitrogen balance • Maintain postnatal growth at normal rate: (15-30 grams/day) • Non protein caloric intake of 60 cal/k/d with an AA intake of 2.5-3 gm/k/d can achieve an anabolic state; 80-85 cal/k/d with same AA concentration can result in nitrogen retention at fetal rate • Essential components are carbohydrates,electrolytes, protein, lipids, vitamins, trace minerals • Ultimate goal is to deliver 100-110 cal/k/d using dextrose, amino acids and lipids

  14. Nutritional Goals Non nitrogen calories: • 65kcal/kg/day by 5 days • 90-110 kcal/kg/day by 7 days • Combined enteral and parenteral nutrition: 100-130kcal/kg/day

  15. Calculation of Calories Calculation of non-nitrogen calories: • Dextrose 3.4kcal/gram • 20% intralipid 2kcal/ml • Protein 4 cal/gram

  16. TPN: Carbohydrates Carbohydrates • Exclusively glucose • With increased glucose concentration, there is increased osmolarity • Should provide 55-65% of total kilocalories • Maximum concentration is 12.5% peripherally • Begin with glucose infusion rate (GIR) of 6 mg/kg/min and gradually advance to 10-12 mg/kg/min GIR: 0.167 x concentration x rate weight

  17. TPN: Protein • Goal is to prevent negative energy and nitrogen balance • High rates of protein turnover supply protein synthesis, tissue remodeling, and growth • Early initiation of protein reverses negative nitrogen balance. • Should provide 7-10% of total calories

  18. TPN: Lipids • Essential fatty acid deficiency avoided with use of 0.5-1 gm/kg/day • Provides additional energy • Should provide 30-50% of total calories • Limit to 3 g/kg/day • Infuse over 20 hours • Monitor serum TG levels (accept < 150 mg/dL)

  19. Daily Requirements of TPN Calories 90-110kcal/kg or as needed H20 125-150 ml/kg or as needed Protein 2.5-4 gm/kg Lipid 2.4 gm/kg

  20. Daily Requirements of lytes, vitamins and minerals Na 3-4 mEq/kg K 2-3 mEq/kg Ca 50-100mg/kg Phosphorus 1-1.5 mM/kg Magnesium 0.5-1mEq/kg Multivitamins 10ml (40%/kg/day) Trace elements 1mL/kg/day (Copper, zinc, chromium, manganese) Zinc 400mcg/kg/day (prematures) 250 mcg/kg/day (term<3mos) 100 mcg/kg/day (term >3mos) Selenium 1-2 mcg/kg/day Carnitine 10mg/kg/day

  21. TPN: Practical Approach • Begin starter TPN in all preemies <1800g • Begin TPN within 24 hours of delivery • Dextrose: Begin with 4-6 mg/kg/min and advance to 10-12 mg/kg/min. • Amino acids: Begin with 2 gm/kg/day and advance by 1gm/kg daily to max of 4 gm/kg/day. • Lipids: Begin with 0.5 gm/kg/day and advance gradually to max of 3 gm/kg/day.

  22. Parenteral Nutrition Weaning • After enteral feeds have been established and tolerated, begin to decrease parenteral nutrition for total fluid 120-150 ml/k/d. • When enteral feeds reach ~80 ml/k/d, discontinue Intralipids and fortify feeds to 22 cal/oz. • At ~100 -120 ml/k/d of enteral intake discontinue parenteral nutrition and central line.

  23. Monitoring • Monitor daily weights • Monitor head circumference, length weekly • Monitor Lytes, Ca as needed. Monitor phos, Mg, albumin, BUN, Cr, total and direct bili, SGPT, alk phos, triglyceride weekly • Consider: zinc, copper, carnitine, and selenium levels at 2-3 months

  24. Complications of TPN Catheter related: • Thrombus (SVC syndrome, chylothorax) • Infection • Extravasation (pleural and pericardial effusions) • Air or fat embolus • Infiltration with tissue injury

  25. Complications of TPN Metabolic: • Electrolyte imbalance • Hypo-hyperglycemia • Hyperlipidemia • Trace mineral and Vit deficiency • Cholestasis • Osteopenia

  26. Etiologies of Inadequate Growth • Actual intake too low • Volume of intake not increased for weight gain • Fore milk feedings • Human milk fortifier not added in correct proportions • Low sodium • Low protein intake • Weaning from incubator too rapidly

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