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Acute malnutrition

From Surgopaedia

Metabolic response to starvation:

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  • After 12 hours
    • Insulin levels fall and glucagon rises
    • Liver glycogen converted to glucose
    • Muscle glycogen broken down into lactate, which is converted to glucose in the liver
  • After 24 hours
    • De novo glucose production from non-carbohydrate precursors, predominately in the liver (breakdown of amino acids as a result of catabolism of skeletal muscle, up to 75g per day)
    • Protein catabolism is readily reversed with administration of glucose
  • More prolonged fasting
    • Reliance on fat oxidation to meet energy requirements (glycerol converted to glucose)
    • Hepatic production of ketones from fatty acids, which is facilitated by low insulin levels
    • After 48-72 hours, CNS may adapt to using ketone bodies as primary fuel source (keto-adaptation). This does not occur in sepsis and trauma, so protein is catabolised to provide gluconeogenic precursors.
    • Once the body switches to using 'fat economy', the protein catabolism is reduced significantly
    • Resting energy expenditure will also decrease, maybe mediated by a decline in conversion of T4 to T3
    • Reduction in resting energy expenditure from about 25-30kcal/kg/day to 15-20kcal/kg/day

Metabolic response to trauma/sepsis/surgery:

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  • Development of a hypermetabolic state and increased protein breakdown
  • Increased counter-regulatory hormones (adrenaline, norad, cortisol, glucagon, growth hormone)
    • Within a few minutes of beginning an operation, these hormones start rising
  • Increased energy requirement
  • Increased nitrogen requirement
  • Insulin resistance and glucose tolerance
  • Preferential oxidation of lipids
  • Increased gluconeogenesis and protein catabolism
  • Loss of adaptive ketogenesis
    • Contrast this with simple starvation
  • Fluid retention with associated hypoalbuminaemia
  • No evidence that provision of high-energy intake would actually be helpful in this setting