These cases are often a challenge and even when we are dealing with them directly it is hard to know what the best answer is. It is even harder when we aren’t directly involved and can never know all the details of what the patient is like or what you have tried already. I would make a couple of broad statements first and a recommendation.
Having diarrhea does not imply malabsorption and I would not assume this is present. I am guessing that is why the patient is receiving pancreatic enzyme but is there evidence of malabsorption such as a fecal fat study.
The nature of the diarrhea you describe does imply to me a failure of water absorption and this would be consistent with the non-specific finding of bowel edema on colonoscopy. The patient is on furosemide does she have increased total body water and does she have intravascular volume overload, which could be contributing to the bowel edema.
Given the patient profile you have given the likelihood of ischaemic colitis is remote to non-existence. I would want to see stronger evidence.
I generally would not use Lomotil as it is a narcotic analogue and does cross the blood brain barrier. If the other agents aren’t working maybe they should be stopped.
The use of concentrated feed is a bit of crap shoot like the other feed changes. The volume of water (feed) delivered into the stomach is so small compared to the fluid produced and excreted throughout the gut that it probably doesn’t affect the diarrhea much one way or the other. If you are giving furosemide to get rid of water then changing to a concentrated formula to reduce water intake makes sense.
I would generally recommend pressing on with enteral feeding (it is good for the gut) and good fecal management and skin care.
Respectfully,
John W. Drover, MD, FACS, FRCSC, CCPE
Associate Professor
Chair and Program Medical Director
Critical Care Program
Queen's University
Kidd 2
Kingston General
Hospital
76 Stuart Street
Kingston,
Ontario
Canada
K7L 2V7
Phone 613-549-6666 ext 6335
Fax 613-548-2480
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I agree…no TPN. (Unless you can confirm malabsorption) – I would stay [closest to iso-osmolar TF] as possible
How much Cals & protein are you providing? I have found that these pts need a high protein load, as they are losing muscle protein r/t atrophy.
Why can’t Metamucil dosing be used to slow transit time? (2-3 TBsp BID or TID)
Does the QUESTRAN really need to be used?
Why the Pancreolipase?
Have never heard of holding TF for synthroid administration – whats that about?
Cyndy
From: criticalca...@googlegroups.com [mailto:criticalca...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jennifer
Sent: Friday, April 20, 2012 9:47 AM
To: criticalca...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [Critical Care Nutrition] Diarrhea in LTAC patient
Hello all-
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