Redirected from TPN
In TPN's simplest form, a bag of nutrients is added to a patient's intravenous (IV) adminsitration set.
In 2003, the preferred method of performing TPN is with a medical infusion pump. A sterile bag of nutrient solution, between 500ml and 4l is provided. The pump infuses a small amount (0.1 to 10ml/hr) continuously in order to keep the vein open. Feeding schedules vary, but a normal regimen ramps up the nutrition over a few bours, levels off the rate for a few hours, and then ramps it down over few more hours, in order to simulate a normal set of meal times.
The nutrient solution consists of water, glucose, salts, amino acids, vitamins and (more controversially) sometimes emulsified fats. Long term TPN patients sometimes suffer from lack of trace nutrients or electrolyte imbalances.
Chronic TPN is performed to a shunt, a tube surgically installed in a major vein, or sometimes an artery. Arterial shunts are more dangerous, but sturdier because an artery wall is more muscular.
Battery-powered ambulatory infusion pumps are used with chronic TPN patients, and usually the pump and a small (100ml) bag of nutrient to keep the vein open are carried in a fanny pack. Outpatient TPN practices are still being refined.
Aside from their dependence on a pump, chronic TPN patients live quite normal lives.
Note that TPN is a sterile medical procedure that should only be performed by trained personnel under medical supervision, using proper equipment.
See also life support, intravenous drip, medicine
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