ECE2017 Eposter Presentations: Interdisciplinary Endocrinology Obesity (3 abstracts)
Hospital REgional de Málaga, Malaga, Spain.
Introduction: A high percentage of patients diagnosed with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) have malnutrition. The nutritional treatment in ALS is essential, affecting muscle strength, quality of life and survival.
Objective: To describe the nutritional characteristics of patients evaluated in a specific nutritional Unit in patients with ALS during 3 years.
Material and methods: A descriptive study of all patients diagnosed with ALS and evaluated in this specific consultation since October 2013. The nutritional status is assessed by anamnesis, 24-h ingestión count, physical examination (BMI, % lost weight, Plicometry, dynamometry), evaluation of dysphagia by EAT-10 (if positive, volume viscosity test) and analytical tests.
Results: Data were obtained from 60 patients. Mean age at diagnosis: 57.5 years (2679 years), 65% male. Bulbar: 28.6%, spinal: 61.2%. The mean time until the evaluation in nutrition Unit was 22.1 month (12.6 in bulbar vs 24.7 in spinal, P<0.05). The initial BMI: 26.4 (18.1 to 36.2), in 78.3%> 25. The nutritional status in the first consultation was (VSG): 23% of patients with moderate malnutrition, 17.1% of severe malnutrition (30.8% of bulbars vs 5.9% of spinal, P<0.05). The most frequent analytical alterations were vitamin D insufficiency/deficiency (58.3%) and hypercholesterolemia (50%). The most frequent analytical disorders were vitamin D deficiency/insufficiency (58.3%) and hypercholesterolemia (22.5%). Nutritional intervention at the first visit was only diet in 46% (7.1% bulbar vs 69% in spinal, P<0.05), thickening prescription in 34%, nutritional supplements in seven patients, gastrostomy in three patients (all of them bulbar). Of the patients who were offered gastrostomy during follow-up (56.8%), 68.4% accepted. The main reason for this was weight loss (83%). The FVC (Forced vital capacity) at this time was: 58% (23 to 97%) and 100% were endoscopic. As complications of gastrostomy: three patients had accidental withdrawal. The mean survival time after gastrostomy was 14 months (225 months).
Conclusions: 40.1% of patients with ALS present moderate/severe malnutrition in the first assessment.
BMI and analytical parameters are not early markers of malnutrition, being weight loss the best marker.
Patients with bulbar ALS present malnutrition more frequently than spinal forms and require an earlier and more aggressive nutritional intervention.