Dietas hospitalares versus estado nutricional de pacientes internados em um hospital universitário
Ano de defesa: | 2013 |
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Autor(a) principal: | |
Orientador(a): | |
Banca de defesa: | |
Tipo de documento: | Dissertação |
Tipo de acesso: | Acesso aberto |
Idioma: | por |
Instituição de defesa: |
Universidade Federal de Uberlândia
BR Programa de Pós-graduação em Ciências da Saúde Ciências da Saúde UFU |
Programa de Pós-Graduação: |
Não Informado pela instituição
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Departamento: |
Não Informado pela instituição
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País: |
Não Informado pela instituição
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Palavras-chave em Português: | |
Link de acesso: | https://repositorio.ufu.br/handle/123456789/12794 |
Resumo: | The high prevalence of hospital protein-energy malnutrition is associated with several factors, including implemented dietary conducts. Most hospitalized patients receive oral diets as their only source of nutrition. Study objectives were to evaluate the consumption of oral diets, the presence of reasons for not ingesting or incomplete food intake, and the evolution of the nutritional status of adult patients admitted to the Hospital de Clínicas, Universidade Federal de Uberlândia (HC-UFU). It was also objective of the study, analyze the general oral diet (GOD) served to inpatients in HC-UFU. The study was prospective, observational and descriptive for the inpatients, and prospective, descriptive, with semi-quantitative/qualitative approach for the food of the hospital GOD. Patients were included in the first 48 hours of hospitalization and maintained in follow-up throughout the period of hospital stay in the internal medicine ward. The supply, intake, minimum and adjusted energy needs (MEN; AEN) and minimum and adjusted protein needs (MPN; APN), and the reasons for not ingesting or incomplete food intake were assessed daily using the 24h Food Record form. The nutritional status of patients was assessed by anthropometric measurements (weight, height, body mass index) and Subjective Global Assessment (SGA). GOD was evaluated during 28 consecutive days, it was performed the weighing of each food served in the styrofoam lunch boxes of the lunch (n=3/day) and dinner (n=3/day) of the four implemented menus. The food options served in snacks (breakfast, afternoon snack and dinner) were not heavy because the portions are standard and known. Tables of nutritional composition were used to calculate the total energy value (TEV) and the energy distribution of macronutrients (percentage) of the food meals served daily, as well as to quantify the portions of foods from different food groups. Twenty-three patients who did not have a classification of malnutrition in the first 48 hours of hospitalization (SGA A) were included in the study, it corresponded to 204 days of follow-up. The supplied oral diets were sufficient to meet the AEN in 148 days (72.5%) and the APN in 80 days (39.2%). Dietary intake was insufficient to meet the AEN in 100 days (49%) and the APN in 156 days (76%). The mean intake of energy and/or protein was lower than the MEN and MPN for 7 patients (30.4%) and smaller than the AEN and APN for 21 patients (91.3%). A large number of reasons for not ingesting or incomplete food intake (n=1193) were reported, of which 1119 (93.8%) was present in food records of days in which food intake was below that adjusted need. The most common reasons were \"fasting\" (27.1%), \"lack of appetite\" (18.1%), \"satiety\" (13.4%) and \"sensory characteristics of food\" (9.1%). At the end of the follow-up period, one patient changed the classification of nutritional status of AGS A to AGS B, and 16 patients (69.6%) showed loss of body weight (-1.4±1.2kg). Negative associations were observed for \"difference between total energy intake and AEN\" and the number of \"reasons for not ingesting or incomplete food intake\" (  =-0.7268; p-value<0.0000), and \"difference between the total amount of protein intake and APN\" and the number of \"reasons for not ingesting or incomplete food intake\" (  =-0.8381; pvalue< 0.0000). And positive associations for \"difference between total energy intake and AEN\" and \"weight difference\" (  =0.5034; p-value=0.0143), and \"difference between the total amount of protein intake and NPA\" and the number of \"weight difference\" (  =0.6441; p-value=0.0009). In assessing the GOD, which presented TEV of the average offer of 2396.53±152.55 kcal/day, the mean energy distribution was adequate for protein (13.47%), carbohydrates (65.08%) and lipids (22%). Variable energy supply (percentage of TEV) was identified at breakfast (15.57%-20.61%), lunch (26.19%-36.59%), dinner (22.21%-31.06%), afternoon snack and supper (8.41%-15.50%). The period of overnight fasting was up to 13h. Regarding food groups, the supply was excessive for beans, meat/eggs, oils/fats/oilseed and sugar/sweets, and deficient for fruit/juices, legumes/vegetables, milk/derivatives. The supply of oral diets and the food intake of energy and protein were insufficient to meet the needs adjusted of considerable proportion of patients. The reasons that interfere the adequate food intake should be investigated and implemented measures to reduce them. It is essential to characterize the quantitative/qualitative aspects of GOD served to inpatients. Reducing the period of overnight fasting, as well as adjustments in the supply of food groups and in the food fractionation can contribute to better meet the nutritional needs and preventing the onset/worsening of nutritional deficiencies. |