What is enteral and parenteral nutritional support?
Sometimes, even when high-calorie and high-protein foods are offered, children with cancer have trouble eating enough to meet their nutritional needs. Tube feedings may be needed to supplement your child’s diet or to serve as the sole source of nutrition to prevent malnutrition. This can involve placing a small tube through the nose, down the esophagus and leaving it either in the stomach (nasogastric or NG tube) or duodenum (nasoduodenal or the first part of the small intestine). The gastrointestinal tract or “gut” must be functioning properly before a tube feeding can be placed. Sometimes, a PEG (percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy) tube is used instead. This is a tube inserted through the abdominal wall that rests in the stomach and is used to give nutrients to patients who cannot swallow. These alternatives to oral feedings may be only temporary. Sometimes, children undergoing treatment for cancer need total parenteral nutrition (TPN) to help meet their nutritional needs. TPN is a