Most patients who are in the last stage of Alzheimer’s disease or other illnesses have difficulty eating and drinking. Families must then ask themselves if the person needs a feeding tube for the elderly.
Families want to make the best decision for the ill person, but they are often misinformed about feeding tubes and may feel pressure from doctors and hospital staff because installing such a tube simplifies feeding.
A person who cannot eat or drink by mouth can receive liquid food through a tube that ends in the stomach. This is enteral tube feeding.
The tube can be inserted through the nose and down into the stomach (nasogastric tube) or be inserted directly into the stomach through a small incision in the stomach (percutaneous endoscopic gastromy, GEP).
Despite their convenience, feeding tubes sometimes do more harm than good. Here’s why:
The use of feeding probes is rarely useful for patients in advanced stages of Alzheimer’s disease.
People suffering from advanced-stage Alzheimer’s disease can no longer communicate or do simple actions. They have difficulty chewing and swallowing. This can cause serious problems, such as weight loss, weakness, and pressure ulcers (bed sores). Food can pass through the lungs and cause pneumonia. Therefore, these people often need help with food.
In many cases it is decided to use a feeding tube. This tube can be passed down the throat or inserted directly into the stomach through a small incision in the abdominal wall. The patient then receives a diet in liquid form through their tube.
It is important to know that tube feeding is no better than a carefully delivered manual food source; it may even be worse. It does not help people live longer, gain weight, regain strength, or regain their abilities, and it can increase the risk of pneumonia and pressure ulcers.
However, in some stages of old age, refusing food and water is a natural and painless step. There is no valid evidence that tube feeding helps these patients live longer.
The use of feeding tubes carries risks.
Tube feeding involves many risks:
Later in life, fluids can invade the patient’s lungs and cause breathing problems.
The use of a feeding tube may be useful when the main cause of the nutritional problem has a good chance of being resolved. For example, the feeding tube can help people who have had a stroke, head injury, or surgery.
Feeding tubes are also useful for patients who have difficulty swallowing and who are not in the end stage of an incurable disease. For example, they can help people suffering from Parkinson’s disease or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig’s disease).
When caring for a person with advanced illness, certain measures can alleviate eating problems and other problems that arise late in life.
Treat illnesses responsible for loss of appetite, such as constipation, depression, or infection;
Manually feed the sick person before opting for a tube. Ask the doctor about the best foods to offer and the best way to give them manually;
Avoid taking unnecessary medications. Some medications can make eating problems worse, including:
Thus, consider palliative care. Many people suffering from advanced disease qualify for palliative care if they have great difficulty drinking and eating to maintain their weight.
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