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Cystic Fibrosis. Diyana Zainal Lorena Ferchaud. What is Cystic Fibrosis?. Inherited mutation in the protein: Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator (CFTR) > 1500 mutations possible, not all resulting in cystic fibrosis Affects lungs and digestive system
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Cystic Fibrosis Diyana Zainal Lorena Ferchaud
What is Cystic Fibrosis? • Inherited mutation in the protein: • Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator (CFTR) • > 1500 mutations possible, not all resulting in cystic fibrosis • Affects lungs and digestive system • Body produces thick and sticky mucus due to electrolyte imbalance • Occurs in the first decade of life, average lifespan is 31 years (O’Riordan, 2009) (O’Sulivan, 2009) (Stallings, 2008)(Farrell, 2008)
Symptoms of Cystic Fibrosis http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/dci/images/cysticfibrosis01.jpg
Who is at risk for Cystic Fibrosis? • 1 in every 2,500 live births worldwide; 1 in 31 Americans are carriers • Conception between 2 carriers will result in • 25% chance their child will have Cystic Fibrosis • 50% chance the child will be a carrier • 25% the child will be a non-carrier • Most will be diagnosed by age 3, 10% of new cases are diagnosed at 18 years or older (Nelms, 2007)
Prevalence of Cystic Fibrosis (O’Sullivan 2009)
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Diagnostic Process (Farrell, 2008)
Sweat Chloride Test • Tested only at accredited CF care centers • Stimulate sweat glands • Collect onto filter paper • Analyze chloride concentration • Chloride concentrations of >60mmol/L is diagnostic of the disease, but not the severity. (O’Sullivan, 2009) (Ferrell, 2008) Sodium and Chloride are collected
Are All Newborns Tested? • Not all states require testing at birth. • 40 states today have testing, all states by 2010 • Patients can be pancreatic sufficient or insufficient • Pancreatic sufficient patients have a milder case and are not diagnosed until later in life. • Age of onset of symptoms are variable • 2 CF mutations vs. 1 CF mutation • Some infants die in utero, some require surgery at birth for meconium ileus • In medieval times midwives would instruct mothers to lick their newborns (Hudson 2002) (Farrell 2008)
Medical Nutrition Therapy • 110% to 200% of energy needs with high calorie, high fat diet • To support weight maintenance • Strong correlation between nutritional status and pulmonary function • Recommended to maintain BMI at or above 50th percentile • Nutritional supplements • Pancreatic enzyme • Fat soluble vitamins • Babies who are breastfed confer lifelong benefits • 500 to 2,500 units lipase per kilogram body weight per meal (O’Sullivan, 2009) ( Stallings, 2008)
Cystic Fibrosis Treatment Cystic Fibrosis Physiotherapy
University HospitalCystic Fibrosis Case Study Patient: Lily Johnson 14 years old Female Diagnosed with Cystic Fibrosis at 6 months
Lily Johnson • Age: 14 years old • Sex: Female • Participates in ballet, jazz and cross country running. Typically runs 3-5 miles, 5-6 times a week.
Chief Complaint Patient reports trouble breathing and her inhaler is not helping. She believes she may have caught a cold from working at a camp for the past two weeks. Her doctor assumes it is pneumonia due to the fact she is hospitalized approximately once a year for pneumonia.
Medical History • Diagnosed at 6 months • Hospitalized for respiratory infections approximately 1x per year, but otherwise, uneventful disease course • Treatment: High frequency chest compression vest, 1 hour twice daily • High frequency chest compression video
Nutrition History • Appetite fine until the last few days • Enjoys fruits, vegetables and most foods but doesn’t drink milk • Mom and grandmother cook healthy, but not always home to eat meals • Fried foods like French fries and pizza causes diarrhea • Realizes the need for a healthy diet, and willing to make changes
24 hr recall/usual food intake 24 hour recall • Breakfast - nothing • Lunch – 2 oz hotdog and bun, 1½ c macaroni and cheese (boxed mix, 2% milk) • Dinner – 5 oz Salisbury steak with ¼ c gravy, few bites green beans, 1 roll + 2 T margarine, 2 c grape juice Usual intake • Breakfast – usually nothing • Lunch - 3 T peanut butter or 2 oz ham and 2 oz Swiss cheese sandwich, 2-3 oz chips, orange or other fruit, water • Dinner – 5-6 oz lean meat, grilled or baked, 1-2 c green salad, ¼ c ranch dressing, 1 c starch side dish, water
Medical Diagnosis • Acute pneumonia confirmed by chest x-ray and sputum cultures
Physical exam • Vitals • 99.1 F • BP 114/60mm Hg • Anthropometric • Ht 5’5” • Wt 102 lbs (25th+ percentile) • UBW: 110-115lbs (3 months ago) • Chest/lungs: • percussion hyperresonant • rhonchi • rales decreased breath sounds
Stature for age • 75th percentile Weight for age • 25th-50th percentile
Lab Values • WBC - 13 (normal 4.8 –11.8) indicating infection • HGB - 11.5 (12-15) • HCT - 33 (37-47) • Ferritin - 19 (20-120) • Transferrin – 219 (250-380) • Magnesium – 1.6 (1.8-3) • HbA1C – 6.3 (3.9-5.2) family history of T2DM, possibly cystic fibrosis-related diabetes All other labs within normal range iron deficient anemia (due to medication)
Cystic FibrosisRelated Diabetes (CFRD) • Common and serious problem, in pancreatic-insufficient individuals • Close correlation with deterioration in lung function and loss of weight • Oral Glucose Tolerance Testing (OGTT) is the most sensitive method to detect CFRD
Food Preferences and Allergies • The patient is an active 14 year old and will eat almost anything, but doesn’t like milk. • She tries to avoid fried foods due to resulting diarrhea. • She has no known allergies.
Nutrition Care Process • Cystic Fibrosis patients need 110 - 200% more kcals than normal to maintain homeostasis. • Harris Benedict Equation BEE = 655 + (9.6 x 46kg) + (1.8 x 165.1cm) - (4.7 x 14y/o)=1328 kcals BEE x IF x AF =1328 kcals x 1.5 x 1.5 = 2988 kcals/day Macronutrients: Protein – 15% - 113g = 452 kcals Fat – 35% - 117g = 1053 kcals CHO – 50% - 374 g = 1496 kcals 3001 kcals (Stallings 2008)
Actual vs Recommended Intake 1775 kcals 80g fat 65g protein 198g CHO (actual) 3001 kcals 117g fat 113g protein 374g CHO (recommended)
Potential Diet-Drug Interactions • Pancrease (1-3 caps after meals) • Pancreatic enzyme replacement • Prevacid (20mg daily) • May decrease abs of Fe and B12 • Humabid (1/2 tablet every 12 hours) • Expectorant (such as Mucinex or Robitussion) • Multivitamin • Proventil PRN • Bronchodilator (Pagna 2007, Progna 2008)
Various intake formats • Main format - oral intake • A relatively healthy teenager hospitalized with pneumonia would not be a good candidate for enteral nutrition supplementation • She will need to consume meals with high nutrient density several times a day until her health (and weight) is restored.
PES Statement 1) Food and nutrition related knowledge deficit (NB-1.1) related to time lapse since last education and change in energy expenditure as evidenced by inconsistent and unregulated use of prescribed medications. 2) Involuntary weight loss (NC – 3.2) related to increase in exercise and failure to increase caloric intake as evidenced by a 10% weight loss over a 3 month period.
Sample Menu:44% CHO, 19% protein and 38% fat • Breakfast • Honey nut cheerios and whole milk • Sourdough bread • Banana • Lunch • Ham and cheese sandwich • Romaine salad and ranch dressing • Orange • Dinner • Steak • Mashed potatoes • Baby carrots • Dinner roll • Caesar salad with dressing • Mid morning snack • Cheese crackers • Afternoon Snack • Peanut butter and jelly sandwich • Yogurt • Supper • Grapes • Frozen yogurt
Outcome goals • Short term: no further weight loss • Long term: maintain BMI at or above the 50th percentile
Action oriented goals • Patient can demonstrate knowledge of diet plan appropriate for a highly active cystic fibrosis patient
Monitor and evaluate • Track weight • Monitor if patient is following an increased energy intake diet • WBC • HGB • HCT • Ferritin • Transferrin • Magnesium • HbA1C
Follow up • RD visits every 3 months • Referral to diabetes educator, if needed
References • Britto C., Oliveira C., Gomes M., Cunha A. Bras Pneumol. 2009;35(5):409-414 • Farrell P, et al. The Journal of Pediatrics. 2008; 153:S4-S14 • Hudsen, V. Leaven. 2002;38:5:99-102. • Moran A. Pediatric Diabetes 2009:10(Suppl.12):43–50. • Nelms, M. Nutrition Therapy and Pathophysiology. 2007:731-737 • O'Sullivan B., Freedman S. The Lancet. 373: 9678, 30 May 2009-5 June 2009, Pages 1891-1904 • O’Riordan S, Robinson P, Donaghue K, Moran A. Pediatric Diabetes 2009: 10(Suppl. 12): 43–50 • Pagana, Kathleen Deska, and Timothy J. Pagana. Mosby’s Diagnostic and Laboratory Test Reference. Saint Louis: Mosby Elsevier, 2007. • Pronsky, Zaneta M. comp. Food and Medication Interactions. Birchrunville: Food- Medication Interactions. 2008. • Stallings V, Stark L, Robinson K, et al. J Am Diet Assoc. 2008;108:832-839.