Chart — Fundamentals
Enteral vs Parenteral Nutrition Chart
The whole decision compresses to one rule — if the gut works, use it — and this chart shows why: route by route, enteral feeding wins on infection, cost, and gut integrity, while parenteral nutrition exists for the gut that can’t participate.
Educational use only. Nutrition route, formula, and rate decisions are made by the provider, pharmacist, and dietitian; follow current orders and facility protocol. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Enteral (Tube Feeding) | Parenteral (TPN / PPN) |
|---|---|---|
| Route | Into the GI tract — NG/ND/NJ tube short-term; PEG/PEJ long-term | Into a vein — central line for TPN; peripheral line for short-term, dilute PPN |
| Requirement | A functioning GI tract that can absorb | Used when the gut cannot be used — it needs only venous access |
| Typical indications | Dysphagia (stroke, neuro disease), mechanical ventilation, decreased LOC, head/neck surgery, inadequate oral intake | Bowel obstruction, prolonged ileus, short bowel syndrome, severe pancreatitis, high-output fistula, GI ischemia |
| What's delivered | Commercial formula (standard, fiber-added, disease-specific) | Compounded dextrose + amino acids + lipids + electrolytes/vitamins, customized to daily labs |
| Infection risk | Lower — preserves gut mucosa and immune function | Higher — central line infection (CLABSI) is the signature complication; formula is a bacterial growth medium |
| Key complications | Aspiration, diarrhea (most common GI issue), tube displacement, clogging, hyperglycemia, refeeding | CLABSI, hyperglycemia, rebound hypoglycemia if stopped abruptly, fluid overload, electrolyte derangements, liver dysfunction long-term, refeeding |
| Core nursing tasks | Verify placement before use (X-ray first), HOB 30–45°, flushes q4h/before & after meds, residuals per policy, oral care | Dedicated lumen, bag & tubing q24h, glucose checks, never stop abruptly (D10W if bag unavailable), never speed up to catch up, sterile hub care |
| Monitoring | Tolerance (distension, nausea, stooling), glucose initially, weight, I&O | Glucose q4–6h initially, daily electrolytes/phos/mag early, daily weight, I&O, LFTs and triglycerides periodically, temperature/site |
| Cost & complexity | Cheaper, simpler, can go home easily | Expensive, pharmacy-compounded, home TPN requires significant support |
Exam Traps
- ✦A working gut means enteral wins — TPN for a patient who could be tube-fed is a wrong answer.
- ✦Bowel obstruction is the classic absolute reason the enteral route is off the table.
- ✦TPN interruptions get D10W, not nothing — rebound hypoglycemia is the trap.
- ✦Both routes can trigger refeeding syndrome in the chronically malnourished — the route doesn't remove the risk.
- ✦Fever on TPN points to the central line before anything else.
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with American Nurses Association (ANA) Standards of Practice · The Joint Commission. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
