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CASE STUDY REPORT: NUTRITIONAL MANAGEMENT OF CROHN’S DISEASE Lindsey Warren, MS ARAMARK Dietetic Intern Providence Medical Center February 13 th , 2012

Case Study Report: Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

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Lindsey Warren, MS ARAMARK Dietetic Intern Providence Medical Center February 13 th , 2012. Case Study Report: Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease. Crohn’s Disease and Malnutrition . Multi-factorial. Hebuterne et al (2009). Vitamin and Mineral Supplements. Hebuterne et al (2009). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

CASE STUDY REPORT: NUTRITIONAL MANAGEMENT OF CROHN’S DISEASE

Lindsey Warren, MSARAMARK Dietetic InternProvidence Medical CenterFebruary 13th, 2012

Page 2: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Crohn’s Disease and Malnutrition

Hebuterne et al (2009)

Intake Deficien

cyMetabolic Disturban

ces

Protein-losing

EnteropathyChronic Blood loss

Malabsorption

Medication

Multi-factorial

Page 3: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Vitamin and Mineral Supplements

Hebuterne et al (2009)

Page 4: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Diet-Related Disease Systematic review (19 studies):

↑intake total fats, PUFAs, omega-6 fatty acids, and meat ↑development of CD.

↑Fiber and fruit intake ↓risk of CD.

↑Fiber: protective affect >22.1gm/day

↑Fruits: 73-80% decreased risk of CD

Hou et al (2011)

Page 5: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Relapse Prevention with a Semi-Vegetarian Diet 2-yr Prospective Clinical Trial Remission Rate

Semi-Vegetarian Diet 100% 1-year, 92% 2-year Incidence of relapse at 2-years was

significantly lower in the SVD group (p=0.0003)

Omnivorous Diet 67% 1-year, 25% 2-year

Chiba et al (2010)

Page 6: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Anti-Inflammatory Effect of Probiotic Yogurt

Single-blinded clinical trial Daily supplementation (125gm x 30

days) Increased immune response

↓TNF-α and IL-12-producing monocytes May play a major role in pathogenesis in

CD No significant changes with plain

yogurt supplementation .Baroja et al (2007)

Page 7: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Research Limitations

More research is needed Lack of large, randomized, controlled

clinical trials Studied only small populations Open-label or single blinded Studied short-term effects only

Page 8: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Nutrition Prescription for Exacerbations Prevent negative nitrogen balance Provide adequate fluid and

electrolyte replacements Diet progression

Clear liquids low-fat, low-fiber, high-protein, high-kilocalorie, diet in small frequent meals.

Add fiber as tolerated Short-term lactose intolerance

Nutrition Care Manual: Nutrition Therapy for Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Page 9: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Nutrition Prescription for Remission Focus:

Weight management Replenishment of nutrient stores

Avoid high-oxalate foods Increase antioxidant intake Encourage probiotics and prebiotics

Page 10: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Case Study Report

27-year-old morbidly obese male Recent job loss; no insurance + Bloody diarrhea and abdominal

pain x 2-3 months before hospitalization

Admission #1 : Crohn’s Disease diagnosis

#2: Pan colitis #3: Colectomy and

Ileostomy placement

Page 11: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Anthropometric Measurements

Height Admission Weight

Ideal Body Weight

Adjusted body weight

BMI

6’ 1” 473lbs 184lbs 256lbs 63kg/m2

Estimation of Nutrient NeedsNutrient needs

19 to 22kcal/kg x 116kg = 2200 to 2552kcal/day

Protein needs

1.5 to 2.0 x 116kg = 174 to 232gm of Protein/day

Page 12: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Diet Progression

Procalamine with lipids @ 75cc/hr

Custom TPN

Clear Liquid Diet

Soft, Bland Diet

Regular Diet

Provided:52g Pro/day941kcal/day

Provided: 150g of Pro/day2120 Kcals/day

Provided: 0g of Pro/day350 Kcals/day

Both Soft and Regular Provided: 80g of Pro/day2000 Kcals/day+ Beneprotein36g of Pro/day150kcal/day

Page 13: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Pertinent MedicationsMedication PurposeZofran Anti-nauseaPrednisone Reduces swelling and redness Insulin Used to treat hyperglycemia secondary to

steroid treatmentRemicade Anti-inflammatoryProtonix Decreases stomach acid productionMesalamine Anti-inflammatoryPropofol Short-acting sedation for surgery and

intubationAlbumin To replete albumin Zosyn Fights infectionFlagyl Fights infectionMagnesium To treat hypomagnesemia

Page 14: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Biochemical DataLaboratory Reference

Range

Case Study Patient’s Lab Values During Time

of Hospitalization

Contributors to Lab Abnormalities

Albumin 3.4 – 4.7 gm/dL 1.1↓,0.9↓, 1.4↓, 1.3↓, 1.4↓

Malnutrition, Malabsorption, Blood loss, Inflammation

PreAlbumin 18 – 36mg/dL 15↓, 27 Malnutrition, Malabsorption, Blood loss, Inflammation

Glucose 70 – 99mg/dL 120↑,136↑, 195↑,181↑, 218↑,197↑, 156↑,139↑,112↑

Steroid treatment, inflammation, infection,

Magnesium 1.5 – 2.5mg/dL 0.7↓, 2.0 Malnutrition and Malabsorption

Calcium 8.4 – 10.2mg/dL 8.1↓, 7.8 ↓, 8.0↓, 8.7 Malnutrition and Malabsorption

Creatinine 0.7 – 1.3mg/dL 0.6↓, 0.7, 0.6↓, 0.5↓, 0.4↓

Malnutrition, Decreased Muscle Mass, Renal insufficiency, Increased protein from Gastrointestinal bleeding.

Page 15: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

ARAMARK Nutrition Classification

Nutrition History – 3 Feeding Modality – 0 Unintentional Weight loss – 3 Weight Status – 4 Serum Albumin – 4 Diagnosis – 3 Total = 17 Severely Compromised

Page 16: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Nutrition DiagnosesNutrition Diagnosis Terminology

Domain

Problem Related To

Etiology As Evidenc

e BySigns

Clinical NC-1.4

#1 Altered Gastro-intestinal Function

R/T Crohn’s Disease

A/E/B 6% Wt ↓ x 3 mo, abdominal pain, N/V, and bloody diarrhea

Oral Intake NI-2.1

#2 Inadequate Oral Intake

R/T N/VAbdominal pain

A/E/B Pt stated poor intake, Alb 0.9gm/dL, and 6% wt loss x 3 mo

Nutrient NI-5.1

#3 Increased Protein needs

R/T Total Colectomy, Ileostomy placement, and malabsorption

A/E/B Alb 1.4gm/dL and pt only receiving 57% of est. needs

Page 17: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Recommended Interventions

Parenteral Nutrition •Initiating Procalamine with lipids @ 100ml/hr

Parenteral Nutrition •Initiating Custom TPN

Meals and Snacks •Advance to low-fiber, bland diet when

medically appropriate

Medical Food

Supplements

•Two Scoops of Beneprotein TID with meals

Nutrition Education-

Content•Nutrition education regarding nutrition relationship

to health/disease and diet modifications for Crohn’s Disease and Ileosotomy

Page 18: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Nutrition Goals

Short-term TPN Tolerance Diet Advancement Adequate po intake Hyperglycemia management during

steroid treatment Long-term

Gradual weight loss to a healthy weight Understands disease impact on health

and nutrition modifications.

Page 19: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Discussion Diet-related disease Probiotics may have anti-

inflammatory benefits Malnutrition

Primary concern for CD patients Independent of weight status

Page 20: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

Discussion Continued…

Case Study Patient Achieved remission with wt↓ (76lbs, 16%

of BW) Short-term goals at discharge

Symptoms had resolved Laboratory data had improved Extremity weakness was improving

Discharged to rehabilitation center

Page 21: Case Study Report:  Nutritional Management of Crohn’s Disease

References

1. Hebuterne X, Filippi J, Al-Jaouni R, Schneider S. Nutritional consequences and nutrition therapy in Crohn’s disease. Gastroenterologie Clinique et Biologique. 2009; 33: S235-S244.

2. Hou J, Abraham B, El-Serag. Dietary intake and risk of developing inflammatory bowel disease: a systematic review of the literature. 2011; 106: 563-573.

3. Chiba M, Abe , Hidehiko T, Sugawara T, Tsuda S, Tozawa H, Fujiwara K, Imai H. Lifestyle-related disease in crohn's disease: relapse prevention by a semi-vegetarian diet. World Journal of Gastroenterology. 2010; 16: 2484-2495

4. Baroja M, Kirjavainen H, and Reid G. Anti-inflammatory effects of probiotic yogurt in inflammatory bowel disease patients. Clinical and experimental immunology. 2007; 149: 470-479.

5. Nutrition Therapy for Inflammatory Bowel Disease. American Dietetic Association. http://nutritioncaremanual.org/index.cfm Accessed online on December 26, 2011.