Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgement
- Foreword
- Glossary
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Fluid and electrolyte management (Na, Cl and K)
- 3 Energy
- 4 Intravenous carbohydrates
- 5 Intravenous lipids
- 6 Early total parenteral nutrition (TPN)
- 7 Parenteral calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, and vitamin D
- 8 Parenteral vitamins
- 9 Trace elements and iron
- 10 Parenteral nutrition guide
- 11 Parenteral nutrition-associated cholestasis in VLBW infants
- 12 Enteral nutrition
- 13 Enteral feeding guidelines practicum
- 14 Optimizing enteral nutrition: protein
- 15 Human milk
- 16 Premature infant formulas
- 17 Standard infant formulas
- 18 Soya formulas
- 19 Protein hydrolysate formulas
- 20 Enteral calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, and vitamin D
- 21 Iron
- 22 Hypercaloric feeding strategy
- 23 Growth in the neonatal intensive care unit influences neurodevelopmental and growth outcomes
- 24 Nutritional assessment
- 25 Post-discharge strategies
- 26 Nutritional management of preterm infants with short bowel syndrome
- 27 Summary
- Index
5 - Intravenous lipids
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgement
- Foreword
- Glossary
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Fluid and electrolyte management (Na, Cl and K)
- 3 Energy
- 4 Intravenous carbohydrates
- 5 Intravenous lipids
- 6 Early total parenteral nutrition (TPN)
- 7 Parenteral calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, and vitamin D
- 8 Parenteral vitamins
- 9 Trace elements and iron
- 10 Parenteral nutrition guide
- 11 Parenteral nutrition-associated cholestasis in VLBW infants
- 12 Enteral nutrition
- 13 Enteral feeding guidelines practicum
- 14 Optimizing enteral nutrition: protein
- 15 Human milk
- 16 Premature infant formulas
- 17 Standard infant formulas
- 18 Soya formulas
- 19 Protein hydrolysate formulas
- 20 Enteral calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, and vitamin D
- 21 Iron
- 22 Hypercaloric feeding strategy
- 23 Growth in the neonatal intensive care unit influences neurodevelopmental and growth outcomes
- 24 Nutritional assessment
- 25 Post-discharge strategies
- 26 Nutritional management of preterm infants with short bowel syndrome
- 27 Summary
- Index
Summary
The use of intravenous lipids is essential to a complete TPN regimen. Lipids serve as a source of linoleic acid to prevent or treat essential fatty acid deficiency (EFAD), and as an energy source. Larger quantities serve as a partial replacement for glucose as a major source of calories (balanced TPN).
The VLBW infant is especially susceptible to the development of EFAD because tissue stores of linoleic acid are small and requirements for essential fatty acids are large secondary to rapid growth. The human fetus depends entirely on placental transfer of essential fatty acids. A VLBW infant with limited nonprotein energy reserve must mobilize fatty acids for energy when receiving intravenous nutrition devoid of lipid. Our own studies in these infants confirm other studies that show that biochemical evidence of EFAD can develop in the VLBW infant during the first week of life on lipid-free regimens.
Standard 20% emulsions contain a lower phospholipids emulsifier/triglycerides ratio than standard 10% lipid emulsions and should preferably be used for TPN. Clearance of lipid emulsions from the blood depends on the activity of lipoprotein lipase. Post-heparin lipoprotein lipase activity can be increased by relatively high doses of heparin; heparin does not improve utilization of intravenous lipids. Therefore the increase in lipase activity by heparin lends to an increase in FFAs which may exceed the infants ability to clear the products of lipolysis. The premature infant can clear 0.15 to 0.2 g/kg/hr of lipids.
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- Information
- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009