Refeeding syndrome: multimodal monitoring and clinical manifestation of an internal severe neurotrauma.
Nina SundströmCamilla BrorssonMarcus KarlssonUrban WiklundLars-Owe D KoskinenPublished in: Journal of clinical monitoring and computing (2020)
Refeeding syndrome (RFS) is a rare, potentially life-threatening, condition seen in malnourished patients starting refeeding. RFS may provoke seizures and acute encephalopathy and can be considered an internal severe neurotrauma in need of specific treatment. The objective was to describe course of disease, treatment and, for the first time, multimodal monitoring output in a comatose patient suffering RFS. After gastric-banding and severe weight loss, the patient initiated self-starving and was transferred to our intensive care unit (ICU) following rapid refeeding. At arrival, seizures, decrease in consciousness (GCS 7) and suspected acute encephalitis was presented. Serum albumin was 8 g/l. Intracranial pressure (ICP), invasive blood pressure and electrocardiography (ECG) were monitored. Pressure reactivity (PRx) and compliance (RAP) were calculated. The patient developed congestive heart failure, anuria and general oedema despite maximal neuro- and general ICU treatment. Global cerebral oedema and hypoperfusion areas with established ischemia were seen. ECG revealed massive cardiac arrhythmia and disturbed autonomic regulation. PRx indicated intact autoregulation (-0.06 ± 0.18, mean ± SD) and relatively normal compliance (RAP = 0.23 ± 0.13). After 15 days the clinical state was improved, and the patient returned to the primary hospital. RFS was associated with serious deviations in homeostasis, high ICP levels, ECG abnormalities, kidney and lung affections. It is of utmost importance to recognize this rare syndrome and to treat appropriately. Despite the severe clinical state, cerebral autoregulation and compensatory reserve were generally normal, questioning the applicability of indirect measurements such as PRx and RAP during neuro-intensive care treatment of RFS patients with cerebral engagement.
Keyphrases
- intensive care unit
- case report
- heart failure
- blood pressure
- heart rate
- early onset
- heart rate variability
- healthcare
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- weight loss
- emergency department
- cardiac arrest
- left ventricular
- hepatitis b virus
- drug induced
- body mass index
- pulmonary embolism
- quantum dots
- blood glucose
- brain injury
- obese patients
- roux en y gastric bypass
- replacement therapy
- electronic health record
- cognitive impairment
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- body composition