1 / 40

Medical Nutrition Therapy for Neurologic Disorders

Chapter 43. Medical Nutrition Therapy for Neurologic Disorders. Neurologic Disease Classification. Neurologic diseases —May have nutritional etiologies resulting from deficiency or excess —Or may be nonnutritional in origin but have significant nutritional considerations.

brady-key
Download Presentation

Medical Nutrition Therapy for Neurologic Disorders

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 43 Medical Nutrition Therapy for Neurologic Disorders

  2. Neurologic Disease Classification • Neurologic diseases —May have nutritional etiologies resulting from deficiency or excess —Or may be nonnutritional in origin but have significant nutritional considerations

  3. Nutrition Therapy in Neurologic Disorders 1. Adrenoleukodystrophy —Lorenzo’s oil lowers VLCFA 2. Alzheimer’s —Assess nutritional status —Minimize distractions at mealtime —Initiate smell or touch of food —Hand guidance to initiate eating —Provide nutrient-dense foods

  4. Nutrition Therapy in Neurologic Disorders—cont’d 3. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) —Prevent malnutrition and dehydration —Monitor dysphagia 4. Epilepsy —Ketogenic diet 5. Guillain-Barré syndrome —Attain positive energy balance using high-energy and protein tube feedings —Assess dysphagia

  5. Nutrition Therapy in Neurologic Disorders—cont’d 6. Migraine headache —Adequate dietary intake —Extensive record keeping of symptoms and foods 7. Myasthenia gravis —Nutrient-dense foods at beginning of meal —Small, frequent meals —Limit physical activity prior to meals

  6. Nutrition Therapy in Neurologic Disorders—cont’d 8. Multiple sclerosis —Antioxidant supplements —Evaluate health status —Distribute fluids throughout waking hours, limit before bed 9. Neurotrauma —Enteral/parenteral nutrition support

  7. Nutrition Therapy in Neurologic Disorders—cont’d 10. Parkinson’s disease —Drug-nutrient interactions —Minimize dietary protein at breakfast and lunch —Ensure nutritionally complete diet 11. Pernicious anemia —B12 injections —Diet liberal in HBV protein —Diet supplemented with iron, vitamin C, and B vitamins

  8. Nutrition Therapy in Neurologic Disorders—cont’d 12. Spinal trauma —Enteral/parenteral nutrition support —High fiber, adequate hydration to minimize constipation —Dietary intake to maintain nutritional health and adequate weight 13. Stroke —Prevention includes dietary alterations —Maintain good nutritional status —Assess possible dysphagia —Enteral/parenteral support may be needed

  9. Nutrition Therapy in NeurologicDisorders—cont’d 14. Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome —Thiamin —Adequate hydration —Diet liberal in high-thiamin foods —Eliminate ETOH —Dietary protein may need to be restricted

  10. Neurologic Syndromes Attributed to Nutritional Deficiency or Excess

  11. Neurologic Syndromes Attributed to Nutritional Deficiency or Excess—cont’d

  12. Spinal Cord Lying within the Vertebral Canal

  13. Clinical Differences between Upper and Lower Motor Neuron Lesions

  14. Basic Functions of Cranial Nerves

  15. Aroma Seasoning Layering/swirling Piping Molding Slurries Garnishing Techniques for Improving Acceptance

  16. Normal Vision

  17. Hemianopsia

  18. Swallowing Occurs in Three Phases

  19. Swallowing Occurs in Three Phases—cont’d

  20. Stroke—Cause Algorithm content developed by John Anderson, PhD, and Sanford C. Garner, PhD, 2000.

  21. Stroke—Pathophysiology Algorithm content developed by John Anderson, PhD, and Sanford C. Garner, PhD, 2000.

  22. Stroke—Medical and Nutritional Management Algorithm content developed by John Anderson, PhD, and Sanford C. Garner, PhD, 2000.

  23. Nutrition-Related Factors and Stroke Risk (BMI = body mass index)

  24. Alzheimer’s Disease—Cause Algorithm content developed by John Anderson, PhD, and Sanford C. Garner, PhD, 2000.

  25. Alzheimer’s Disease—Pathophysiology Algorithm content developed by John Anderson, PhD, and Sanford C. Garner, PhD, 2000.

  26. Alzheimer’s Disease—Medical and Nutritional Management Algorithm content developed by John Anderson, PhD, and Sanford C. Garner, PhD, 2000.

  27. Practical Interventions for Eating-Related Behavioral Problems Common in Individuals with Dementia

  28. Practical Interventions for Eating-Related Behavioral Problems Common in Individuals with Dementia —cont’d

  29. Diet for Easy Chewing and Swallowing

  30. Typical Ketogenic Diet Menu Using MCT Oil

  31. Progression of Multiple Sclerosis

  32. Protein Redistribution in L-DOPA Therapy

  33. Incomplete Spinal Cord Injury Syndromes

  34. Sequelae of Spinal Cord Injury and Rehabilitation Challenges

  35. Localizing Signs of Mass Lesion • Lesions in the central portion of the frontal lobes may cause speech impairment. • Lesions of the occipital lobes affect the visual field. • Lesions of the cerebellum and brainstem affect the cranial nerves. • Lesions in the spinal cord affect motor neurons • Lesions of the pituitary gland and hypothalamus may induce electrolyte or metabolic abnormalities and/or visual disturbances.

  36. Medical Nutrition Therapy • Cognitive and swallowing dysfunction usually affect nutritional management and place neurologic patients at risk for malnutrition. • The nutritional assessment should emphasize patterns of normal chewing, swallowing, and ingestion in addition to traditional assessment components.

  37. Nutritional Support • Enteral nutrition support is the preferred modality for nutrition support in patients who cannot swallow or eat because of deteriorating neurologic disease.

  38. Brain Injury • 400,000 new cases of brain injury occur each year in the United States • Most result from motor vehicle crashes. • Incidence is highest in young people and elderly; twice as often in males than females • Almost all patients with a severe head injury have some degree of disability.

  39. Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) Strong prognostic value for neurologic recovery in head-injured patients (scale evaluating and quantitating the degree of coma by determining best responses to standardized stimuli) • Eye opening (4 Spontaneous–1 None) • Verbal response (5 Oriented–1 None) • Motor response (6 Follows command–1 None) Severity of head injury: mild = GCS 13-15, moderate = GCS 9-12, severe = GCS 3-8

  40. Older age Low Glasgow ComaScale score Pupil dilatation Low blood pressure All these variables have an additive effect on morbidity and mortality Inadequate oxygenation early after injury Prolonged and/or difficult to control intracranial pressure Strong Predictors of Poor Outcome after Head Injury

More Related