This article defines Clinical Nutrition as the branch of medical practice that assesses and manages nutritional status in individuals with acute or chronic illnesses, surgical conditions, or inability to consume food orally. Enteral nutrition refers to delivery of liquid formula feedings directly into the stomach or small intestine via a tube (nasogastric, nasoenteric, gastrostomy, jejunostomy). Parenteral nutrition refers to intravenous delivery of nutrient formulations (carbohydrates, proteins, fats, vitamins, minerals, electrolytes) when the gastrointestinal tract cannot be used. Core features: (1) malnutrition screening and assessment (identifying individuals at risk using validated tools), (2) indications for enteral feeding (inability to swallow, inadequate oral intake, gastrointestinal dysfunction, hypermetabolic states), (3) enteral access devices and feeding protocols (tube placement, nutrition formulation selection, administration schedules), (4) parenteral nutrition compounding and administration (central vs peripheral venous access, sterile compounding, metabolic monitoring), (5) complication prevention and management (tube displacement, aspiration, refeeding syndrome, line infections, metabolic disturbances). The article addresses: stated objectives of clinical nutrition support; key concepts including malnutrition risk screening, refeeding syndrome, and gut failure; core mechanisms such as nutrition assessment tools, tube feeding formulas, and parenteral nutrition prescribing; international comparisons and debated issues (enteral vs parenteral route, early feeding after surgery, nutrition support in end-of-life care); summary and emerging trends (home parenteral nutrition, immunonutrition, artificial intelligence for prescribing); and a Q&A section.
This article describes clinical nutrition and feeding support without endorsing specific products or protocols. Objectives commonly cited: preventing and treating malnutrition, maintaining gut integrity, reducing infection and complication rates, improving wound healing, shortening hospital length of stay, and supporting recovery from critical illness or major surgery. The article notes that undernutrition affects 20-50% of hospitalised patients, and enteral nutrition is generally preferred over parenteral nutrition when the gut is functional.
Key terminology:
Malnutrition screening tools (selected):
Enteral versus parenteral nutrition (indications):
Enteral access devices and placement:
Enteral formula types:
Parenteral nutrition composition:
Metabolic monitoring during nutrition support:
Effectiveness evidence:
International nutrition support organisations and guidelines:
| Organisation | Region | Key guideline publications |
|---|---|---|
| ASPEN (American Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition) | United States | Critical care, adults and paediatric nutrition support |
| ESPEN (European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism) | Europe | Clinical nutrition, micronutrient guidelines |
| PENSA (Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition Society of Asia) | Asia | Regional adaptations |
Debated issues:
Summary: Clinical nutrition support includes enteral tube feeding (preferred when gut works) and parenteral intravenous feeding (when gut fails). Malnutrition screening tools (MUST, NRS-2002) identify high-risk individuals. Refeeding syndrome requires gradual feeding and electrolyte monitoring. Early enteral nutrition (24-48 hours) improves outcomes in critical illness.
Emerging trends:
Q1: What is the difference between enteral feeding and total parenteral nutrition?
A: Enteral feeding delivers nutrients through a tube into the stomach or small intestine, using the digestive tract. Parenteral nutrition delivers nutrients intravenously, bypassing the digestive tract. Enteral is safer, cheaper, and physiologically preferred. Parenteral is reserved when enteral is impossible or insufficient.
Q2: How is refeeding syndrome prevented?
A: Identify high-risk individuals (prolonged fasting, significant weight loss, alcoholism, electrolyte abnormalities). Start feeding at low calorie level (e.g., 10-20 kcal/kg/day or 50% of goal), increase gradually over 3-5 days. Monitor phosphate, potassium, magnesium, and glucose daily for first 3-5 days. Replace electrolytes aggressively (oral or IV). Supplement with thiamine (vitamin B1) 100-300 mg daily for first 3 days.
Q3: What are the signs of tube feeding intolerance?
A: High gastric residual volumes (>250-500 mL on two consecutive checks), abdominal distension, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, or constipation. Assess and treat cause (constipation, medication, infection, formula composition). Consider prokinetic agents (metoclopramide, erythromycin) or post-pyloric tube placement.
Q4: Can patients on home parenteral nutrition have a normal quality of life?
A: Many do. With training, individuals self-administer parenteral nutrition overnight over 8-12 hours, disconnect in the morning, and engage in normal daily activities (work, school, travel). Central line care (sterile dressing changes, flushing, preventing infection) is essential. Portable infusion pumps allow mobility.
https://www.espen.org/
https://www.nutritioncare.org/ (ASPEN)
https://www.who.int/health-topics/malnutrition
https://www.bapen.org.uk/ (British Association for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition)
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