Psychiatric Bulletin (2007) 31: 209-211. doi: 10.1192/pb.bp.106.009878
© 2007 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Risks and pitfalls for the management of refeeding syndrome in psychiatric patients
Marco Catani, Lecturer in Psychological Medicine and Neuropsychiatry and Honorary
Specialist Registrar
Institute of Psychiatry, De Crespigny Park, London SE5 8AF, email:
m.catani{at}iop.kcl.ac.uk
Roger Howells, Consultant Psychiatrist
Sloane Court Practice, London SW3 4TD and Research Associate, Institute
of Psychiatry, London SE5 8AF
Declaration of interest
None.

Abstract
AIMS AND METHOD
We present two patients who developed refeeding syndrome following
admission to a general psychiatry ward. The practical implications of
assessing and managing medical consequences in patients with mental illness
who start refeeding after a period of starvation are discussed.
RESULTS
Patients presented with overlapping clinical manifestations of mental
illness and refeeding syndrome that were difficult to recognise and
manage.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Awareness of refeeding syndrome in patients with mental illness may prevent
fatal physical complications.

Introduction
Refeeding syndrome can be defined as severe electrolyte and
fluid shift
associated with metabolic abnormalities in patients
with malnutrition
undergoing realimentation, whether orally,
enterally, or parenterally
(
Crook et al, 2001).
Historically,
refeeding syndrome was first described in starving wartime
prisoners
and victims of famines
(
Schnitker et al,
1951). More recently
this syndrome has been well documented in
surgical and oncology
patients undergoing parenteral nutrition
(
Crook et al, 2001;
Hearing, 2004). In psychiatry,
refeeding syndrome occurs in
people with eating disorders and alcoholism
(
Cumming et al, 1987),
but it is often missed in other psychiatric patients where
malnutrition is
relatively common. Up to 50% of patients admitted
to acute psychiatric wards
are at risk of malnutrition (
Abayomi &
Hackett, 2004).
This can be extreme in the context of
self-neglect, alcohol
and drug dependency, depression, schizophrenia and
dementia
(
Gray & Gray,
1989). The consequences of missing a diagnosis
of refeeding
syndrome in these patients may be serious, as
complications range from
neurological disability (for example
Wernicke-Korsakov syndrome) to metabolic
complications (for
example hypophosphataemia) and death
(
Crook et al, 2001).
We
describe refeeding syndrome in two patients routinely admitted
to a general
psychiatric ward and illustrate the potential
pitfalls in the prevention,
diagnosis and management of severe
malnutrition and refeeding complications in
patients with mental
illness.

Case report 1
A 60-year-old White man was transferred from a medical ward
after being
admitted with severe dehydration and malnutrition
associated with a major
depressive episode and suicidal ideation.
He had stopped eating completely for
3 weeks after about 4
months of eating poorly, but had continued to drink
water up
to a few days before he was found unconscious at home by a neighbour.
Rehydration and refeeding were begun and he was started on
vitamin
supplementation and potassium chloride. He was admitted
to a general
psychiatric ward on the fifth day when the depression
was treated with 75 mg
venlafaxine daily. Physical examination
revealed diplopia, ataxia with severe
muscle weakness and peripheral
oedema. Despite a weight of 81 kg on admission
(BMI=24) he
stated that he had lost 20 kg in 4 months. During his stay in
hospital his weight increased to 89 kg in 2 weeks (BMI=27).
An
electrocardiogram on the third day of hospitalisation showed
a tachycardia of
98 beats per minute and was low voltage. The
phosphate level fell to 0.36
mmol/l, and the haemoglobin fell
to 8.4 g/dl (see
Fig.1). A specific diet for
hypophosphatemia
was instigated and the patient was screened for possible
gastrointestinal
bleeding - faecal occult blood and full endoscopy were
normal.
His recovery was uneventful.

Case report 2
A 54-year-old African-Caribbean man was transferred to a general
psychiatric ward following medical admission for collapse at
home. He had
systematised persecutory delusions which had prevented
him from eating for 5
weeks. He had no past psychiatric history.
He had a past history of muscle
pain for which he took simple
analgesics. On admission he weighed 57 kg
(BMI=19). Following
realimentation he developed diplopia associated with
bilateral
horizontal nystagmus and palsy of the right sixth cranial nerve.
Generalised weakness and ataxic gait were noticed. Examination
of the abdomen
revealed mild hepatomegaly and tenderness in
the right hypocondrium. Diagnoses
of delusional disorder and
Wernickes encephalopathy were made. He was
treated with
parenteral thiamine for 7 days and 5 mg olanzapine daily. He
had
been cooperative and was allowed to start refeeding without
any particular
dietary restriction. On admission, routine blood
tests were normal but on the
fourth day the phosphate levels
were markedly reduced at 0.26 mmol/l. The
phosphate levels
returned to normal without adverse medical complications,
except
for an acute anaemia - haemoglobin levels fell from 13.3 to
10.1 g/dl
(see
Fig. 1). The patient
refused further investigations
for the anaemia.

Discussion
Psychiatric training has traditionally emphasised the importance
of
identifying and effectively treating Wernickes encephalopathy
in
patients with alcohol dependency. However, it is important
to be aware of
other serious consequences of refeeding in patients
with malnutrition, such as
electrolyte imbalance, in particular
hypophosphataemia, and acute anaemia.
During refeeding, a shift from fat to carbohydrate metabolism occurs (see
Fig. 2;
Crook et al, 2001). A
glucose load stimulates insulin release, causing increased cellular uptake of
glucose, phosphate, potassium, magnesium and water, and protein synthesis.
Severe hypophosphataemia may cause a deficit in adenosine triphosphate (ATP)
and 2,3 diphosphogycerate synthesis with widespread neuromuscular and
haematolgical consequences (Mallet,
2002). Thiamine deficiency occurs due to increased cellular
utilisation of thiamine in response to carbohydrate refeeding and is
associated with the precipitation of Wernickes encephalopathy, and the
potential development of Korsakov syndrome with its attendant lifelong
neuropsychiatric disability.
As in the two case reports presented a range of clinical events
may go
unrecognised. (See
Fig. 3 for
clinical representations
of refeeding syndrome.) Severe hypophosphataemia is a
prime
feature, and usually this is what alerts the clinician. The
other facets
to the metabolic disorder include thiamine and
other vitamin deficiencies,
hypokalaemia, hypomagnesaemia,
as well as glucose and fluid balance
abnormalities (
Crook et al,
2001).
The severe hypophosphataemia may present with
rhabdomyolysis
and cardiomyopathy. It may cause epilepsy, delirium and
paraesthesia
(
Knochel, 1981).
Haemolysis and platelet dysfunction are rare
complications that usually follow
severe hypophosphatemia (
Jacob &
Amsden, 1971;
Knochel,
1981), although in the two cases we described haemolytic
anaemia
followed moderate reduction of phosphate levels. The
exact mechanism is
unknown but probably is due to increased
rigidity of membranes
(
Jacob & Amsden, 1971) and
metabolic
acidosis induced by reduced levels of ATP
(
Knochel, 1981).
Hypokalaemia
may be associated with the development of cardiac
arrhythmias, hypotension,
and cardiac arrest. It may also cause
ileus, weakness, paralysis, delirium and
rhabdomyolysis. Hypomagnesaemia
when severe may cause potentially fatal
cardiac arrhythmias
as well as neuromuscular symptoms, ataxia, epilepsy and
delirium.
Fluid intolerance in refeeding syndrome may result in cardiac
failure, dehydration or fluid overload, hypotension, pre-renal
failure and
sudden death. Abnormal glucose and lipid metabolism
can potentially trigger
hyperglycaemia and hypercapnic respiratory
failure
(
Crook et al,
2001).
The lack of understanding and recognition of refeeding syndrome
may result
in psychiatrists and psychiatric nurses considering
physical complications of
this syndrome such as fatigue, ataxia,
paresthesias and delirium to be a
manifestation of mental illness.
Blood tests should be taken before and after
refeeding to monitor
haemoglobin, plasma electrolytes (in particular sodium,
potassium,
phosphate, and magnesium), glucose, alanine aminotransferase,
aspartate aminotransferase, creatinine phosphokinase. Laboratory
findings such
as raised creatinine phosphokinase and hypophosphataemia,
if detected, can be
wrongly attributed to neuroleptic malignant
syndrome
(
Harsch, 1987).
| Box 1. Practice points in the management of refeeding syndrome in
patients with mental illness
- Malnourishment is common in subjects with anorexia and alcoholism but also
in depression, schizophrenia and elderly patients with cognitive
impairment
- An increase in appetite is usually considered a good prognostic factor in
patients with psychiatric disorders who are malnourished. For this reason
nutritional repletion is usually encouraged in acute psychiatric wards and
other psychiatric settings. However, it should be planned with the help of a
dietician
- Refeeding syndrome is a largely unrecognised cause of Wernickes
encephalopathy, epileptic seizures, and cardiac and respiratory failure in
psychiatric patients with low body weight. It has the potential to cause
sudden death
- Refeeding syndrome may start through the positive impact of psychotropic
medication and the ward milieu before the ward staff have properly considered
the potential development of refeeding syndrome
- The clinical manifestations of mental illness and refeeding syndrome
overlap; emergent symptoms of refeeding syndrome may be misattributed to
mental illness
- Blood tests may be normal on admission, and should be taken serially
- Psychotropic medications may contribute to complications of refeeding
syndrome such as rhabdomyolysis, hypotension, arrhythmia, seizures, and
hypophosphataemia
- The management of refeeding syndrome in psychiatric patients may be
challenging through their potential non-cooperation with blood tests,
intravenous infusions or nutritional restrictions; prevention is therefore
paramount
- Standardised management protocols that take into account the special
circumstances of patients with psychiatric disorders are required
|
Psychotropic drug treatment, which can stimulate appetite, may increase the
risk of refeeding syndrome being precipitated and aggravate electrolyte
imbalance.
The management of refeeding syndrome has been described using intravenous
phosphate regimens and parenteral thiamine
(Faintuch et al, 2001;
Hearing, 2004). However there
is a lack of consensus as to who should be treated, how, and where, but it
would seem important that hospital nutrition teams should be involved early
(Hearing, 2004). Patients with
mental illness may refuse physical investigation, and fail to adhere to
dietary restrictions. Close liaison between medical and psychiatric teams is
required.
It is not uncommon for psychiatric in-patients not to be weighed, and for
the significance of nutritional assessment not to be understood. However the
first case we present illustrates that a refeeding syndrome can occur with an
apparently normal body weight and highlights the importance of taking a
detailed history.
Psychiatrists and mental health workers require specific training in this
area (see Box 1), and textbooks
of psychiatry and guidelines will need to include reference to refeeding
syndromes in psychiatric patients who are malnourished.

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