Refeeding syndrome vs Nutritional Recovery syndrome (easy differences)

Table of Contents(toc)

Refeeding Syndrome (RFS)


Definition:
A potentially fatal shift in fluids and electrolytes that occurs in malnourished patients when nutritional support (oral, enteral, or parenteral) is started too rapidly.

Pathophysiology:

  • Starvation → body switches to fat and protein metabolism, ↓ insulin, ↑ catabolism.

  • Refeeding with carbohydrate → ↑ insulin secretion → rapid cellular uptake of phosphate, potassium, magnesium.

  • Leads to hypophosphatemia (hallmark), hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, thiamine deficiency, sodium/water retention.

  • Results in multi-system dysfunction.

Risk factors:

  • Severe malnutrition (BMI <16, >10% weight loss in 2–3 months).

  • Little or no intake >5–7 days.

  • Anorexia nervosa, cancer cachexia, chronic alcoholism, prolonged fasting, postoperative patients.

Clinical features:

  • Neurological: confusion, seizures, weakness, paresthesia, coma.

  • Cardiac: arrhythmias, heart failure, hypotension, sudden death.

  • Respiratory: muscle weakness, respiratory failure.

  • Hematologic: hemolysis, impaired WBC function.

  • Metabolic: edema, metabolic alkalosis, vitamin deficiencies (especially thiamine → Wernicke’s encephalopathy).

Prevention & Management:

  • Identify high-risk patients.

  • Check and correct phosphate, potassium, magnesium, thiamine before starting feeds.

  • Start nutrition slowly (e.g., 10 kcal/kg/day, then advance gradually).

  • Supplement thiamine, multivitamins, trace elements.

  • Careful fluid balance monitoring.

  • Electrolyte replacement as needed.

Nutritional Recovery Syndrome (Gómez Syndrome)

Definition:
A clinical syndrome observed in severely malnourished children during the recovery phase after initiation of nutritional rehabilitation.

Pathophysiology:

  • During early recovery, catch-up growth is accelerated.

  • Rapid tissue anabolism → hormonal and metabolic adaptations.

  • In boys, disproportionately rapid testicular and secondary sexual development can occur.

Clinical features:

  • Appears after nutritional rehabilitation (usually in protein-energy malnutrition).

  • Exuberant catch-up growth with restlessness, hyperactivity.

  • Gynecomastia (due to imbalance of estrogen/testosterone metabolism).

  • Testicular enlargement (boys).

  • Musculoskeletal pains.

  • Psychological changes: overactivity, irritability.

Prognosis:

  • Usually benign and self-limiting.

  • Indicates return of endocrine function and recovery, but needs monitoring.

Summary: Key difference from Refeeding Syndrome:

  • Refeeding syndrome → acute, life-threatening metabolic derangements soon after feeding is restarted.

  • Nutritional recovery syndrome → subacute/late phenomenon during rehabilitation, marked by hormonal/endocrine changes, not electrolyte shifts.

Feature Refeeding Syndrome (RFS) Nutritional Recovery Syndrome (NRS / Gómez Syndrome)
Timing Within hours–days of restarting nutrition in a malnourished patient After weeks of nutritional rehabilitation in children
Pathophysiology Sudden ↑ insulin after carbohydrate → intracellular shift of phosphate, K⁺, Mg²⁺ + thiamine depletion Rapid anabolism & hormonal recovery during catch-up growth
Main biochemical changes Hypophosphatemia (hallmark), hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, thiamine deficiency, fluid overload No major electrolyte abnormality
Clinical features Weakness, confusion, arrhythmias, heart failure, respiratory failure, seizures, Wernicke’s encephalopathy Restlessness, hyperactivity, musculoskeletal pains, gynecomastia, testicular enlargement (boys)
Severity Potentially life-threatening Usually benign and self-limiting
Risk groups Anorexia nervosa, prolonged fasting, cancer cachexia, chronic alcoholism, prolonged NPO/post-op Children recovering from protein-energy malnutrition
Management Slow feeding (start ~10 kcal/kg/day), correct electrolytes, give thiamine, monitor fluids Reassure, monitor growth & hormones; no specific treatment needed
Key point Acute metabolic emergency Late recovery phenomenon during rehabilitation

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