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How to Transition from Continuous to Bolus Tube Feeding 

Clinical Nutrition University
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This video teaches you how to transition a patient from a continuous enteral infusion to a bolus feeding regimen.
It begins with the introduction to a case study in which the patient had a stroke and was started on continuous tube feeding.
Then it transitions into a step-by-step process for switching them over to bolus feeding.
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📚 Chapters for this video:
0:00 How to transition from continuous to bolus tube feeding
0:21 Intro to case study
2:04 Is bolus feeding appropriate?
4:03 Reassess continuous infusion
5:29 Determine total volume per day
6:04 Choose the number of feeding sessions
6:44 Calculate volume of each bolus
7:13 Select free water flushes
7:55 Check the work
9:53 Write a prescription
10:30 Strategy for giving first bolus
11:19 Writing prescription in canisters per day/session
This video is for educational purposes only. It is in no way intended to serve as a way to diagnose medical conditions or become a replacement for individualized care from a physician. 🙏🏼
Thank you for supporting my work on RU-vid! 🙌🏼
#nutritionsupport #tubefeeding #medicine

Опубликовано:

 

1 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 17   
@clinicalnutritionuniversity
NEW BOOK: cnu.sellfy.store/ ALSO ON AMAZON: a.co/d/6C6lXGa ________________________________ This video was recorded at a speed to accommodate all learners. If you're a fast learner, listen at 1.25x or 1.5x by adjusting the playback speed under Settings.
@zckom
@zckom Год назад
Nicely created video, very informative. I will share it to my intern.
@clinicalnutritionuniversity
Thank you so much for watching it and sharing it! 🙏🏼
@BevLeeChannel
@BevLeeChannel 8 месяцев назад
This is so helpful thank you!
@helmutkrusemann9194
@helmutkrusemann9194 Год назад
at First, thank you very much for all the content, I really appreciate this. I was diagnosed with enteric neuropathy and severe motility disorder in the small intestine, no phase three activity and slow transit constipation due to nerve damage. My gut basically stopped working, especially the small intestine. I can’t eat fiber, at all, zero. I don’t have a dietitian because my disease is that complex and rare and my doctors just said Take prucaloprid and laxative and see what you can eat. No, I want to educate myself as much as possible that’s why I’m here, in a field where I don’t have a clue but I’m learning. I want to know what fats are the easiest and fastest to digest for my small intestine and which fats requires the least effort of digestion. I’m totally lost because of all the conflicting information. Some say saturated fats are easy to digest because they are short chain and water soluble, some say long chain fatty acids like olive oil are easy to digest and saturated fats are hard to digest!? It so confusing. I would appreciate a video how people like me should eat, especially what kind of fats and what other foods that are easy to digest. Thank you very much for your valuable time and help
@clinicalnutritionuniversity
I’m sorry to hear about what you are going through. I will definitely considered making a video on the different types of fats in the future!
@nikolaj788
@nikolaj788 Год назад
@@clinicalnutritionuniversity I would be super interested to hear about this too, I am very much the same. Thx
@helmutkrusemann9194
@helmutkrusemann9194 Год назад
@@clinicalnutritionuniversity Thank you so much for responding to my comment and for willing to help me out. I really appreciate this and I´m more than thankful!!! basically I want to know which fats are the easiest and quickest for the small intestine to digest, short chain saturated fat, long chain saturated fat, long chain unsaturated fat. Is it fat, especially milk fat like butter or ghee, or is it fat like olive oil and what kind of meat is easier and quicker to digest for the small intestine, very lean chicken breast or skinless chicken thighs for example? Thank you so much
@averym987
@averym987 Год назад
very interesting questions
@averym987
@averym987 Год назад
@@clinicalnutritionuniversity yes please, I´m also interested. thank you
@stayaway2058
@stayaway2058 Год назад
This channel so helpfull for clinical Nutrition students. Thank u for ur classes🥰
@clinicalnutritionuniversity
Thank you! Happy to hear you’re enjoying it so far!
@candy_313
@candy_313 Год назад
Great video! Thank you for your content.
@clinicalnutritionuniversity
Thank you for watching it! 🙏🏼
@itspricila
@itspricila 11 месяцев назад
What is the recommended range volume for a bolus ?
@santiagomelendez8771
@santiagomelendez8771 Год назад
What about 7 canisters instead of 6.5 for convenience sake? 2 every feeding session and 1 canisters in the last.
@clinicalnutritionuniversity
You are free to do that if you please. It adds a little over 100 calories to the day.
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