Delirium resident survival guide

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Pratik Bahekar, MBBS [2]

Overview

It is commonly associated with a disturbance of consciousness (e.g., reduced clarity of awareness of the environment). The change in cognition (memory deficit, disorientation, language disturbance) or the development of a perceptual disturbance, must be one that is not better accounted by a preexisting, established, or evolving dementia. Usually the rapidly fluctuating time course of delirium is used to help in the latter distinction.

Distressing symptoms of delirium are sometimes treated with antipsychotic, preferably those with minimal anticholinergic activity, such as haloperidol or risperidone, or else with benzodiazepine, which decrease the anxiety felt by a person who may also be disoriented, and has difficulty completing tasks. However, since these drug treatments do not address the underlying cause of delirium, and may mask changes in delirium which themselves may be helpful in assessing the patient's underlying changes in health, their use is difficult. Because delirium is a mere symptom of another problem that may be very subtle, the wisdom of treatment of the delirious patient with drugs must overcome natural skepticism, and requires a high degree of skill.

Definition

Delirium is an acute and relatively sudden (developing over hours to days), fluctuating decline in attention-focus, perception, and cognition.

Causes

Life Threatening Causes

Life-threatening causes include conditions which may result in death or permanent disability within 24 hours if left untreated.

Common Causes

Management

Diagnosis

Characterize the symptoms:

❑ Impairment of sleep awake cycle
❑ Change in psychomotor activity
❑ Sensation of tightness, pressure, or squeezing
❑ Emotional disturbances with rapid and unpredictable shifts from one emotional state to another: anxiety, fear, depression,irritability, anger, euphoria, and apathy
❑ Nonspecific neurological abnormalities: tremor, myoclonus, asterixis, and reflex and muscle tone changes

 
 
 
 
 
 
Obtain detailed history:

❑ Collateral history from relatives, out patient care providers, case managers etc. is crucial in confused mental states.
❑ Baseline blood pressure
❑ Previous medical history including psychiatric diagnosis
❑ List of medications offending drugs (sedative, hypnotics, narcotics, anticholinergic drugs, corticosteroids, polypharmacy, withdrawal of alcohol or other drugs)


Identify if patient is at high risk to develop delirium:
❑ Unnderlying cognitive impairment
❑ Older age (>65 years)
❑ History of delirium, stroke, neurological disease, falls or gait disorder
❑ Associating multiple medical aliments
❑ Male gender
❑ Sensory impairment (hearing or vision)
❑ Immobilization (catheters or restraints)
❑ Acute neurological pathology (for example, acute stroke [usually right parietal], intracranial hemorrhage, meningitis, enkephalitis)
❑ Intercurrent illness (for example, infections, iatrogenic complications, severe acute illness, anemia, dehydration, poor nutritional status, fracture or trauma, HIV infection)
❑ Metabolic impairment
❑ Surgery
❑ Stressful surroundings (for example, admission to an intensive care unit)
❑ Pain
❑ Emotional stress

❑ Lack of sleep
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Diagnosis of Delerium

❑ DSM V criterias

  1. Diminished focus or concentration and lack of knowledge or perception of the surroundings
  2. Developing in a brief period of time accounting to hours to days, a shift from a baseline which change in severity in it’s course
  3. Also, interference in faculties of cognition like, memory, orientation, visuospatial ability, or language
  4. 1st and 3rd criteria are not a result of any previous, current, or developing neurocognitive disorder and is not related to a shift in arousal status e.g. coma
  5. The manifestation of the disturbances resulting as a,
  • Physiological sequel of a medical condition
  • Intoxication or Withdrawal of substance(s)/ medicine(s)/ toxin(s)
  • Is due to multiple etiologies
  • As explained by the history, physical examination, or laboratory findings

Specify if,

Substance intoxication delirium
Substance withdrawal delirium
Delirium caused by another medical condition
Delirium caused by multiple etiologies

Specify if delirium is:

Acute
Persistent

Specify if delirium is:

Hyperactive
Hypoactive
Mixed level of activity
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Focused examination to find out underlying etiology:

Vital signs
Blood pressure

❑ If lower than baseline: Shock, drug overdose e.g. opiates
❑ If higher than baseline: Increased intracranial pressure, drug overdose e.g. cocaine, hypertensive crisis

Pulse

Tachycardia:Shock, drug overdose eg. cocaine
Bradycardia:Increased intracranial pressure

❑ Respiratory rate

❑ If lower: drug overdose e.g. opiates
❑ If higher: Pulmonary pathology like pneumonia, asthma, COPD

❑ Raised temperature

❑ Suspect cholinergic drug overdose
❑ Underlying infection

Skin
Jaundice: Liver and biliary pathology
❑ Cherry red appearance: CO poisoning
Edema: Heart failure, liver failure, renal failure, malnutrition
Cyanosis:Heart failure, lung pathology, drug overdose
❑ Needle marks: drug overdose

Appearance
❑ Cherry red tongue, lip fissure etc suggestive of malnutrition
❑ Unkempt and unhyginic: Scrizophrenia

Nurological examination
❑ Emergence of new focal neurological signs: Cerebrovascular event
❑ Trauma to head: hemorrhage and increased intracranial pressure
❑ Meningeal signs: Meningitis
❑ Neurodegenerative diseases: parkinsonism, alzhimers etc.
❑ Mental status examination: Dementia

Cardiovascular examination
❑ New onset murmur: myocardial infarction
❑ S3 and S4: Heart failure
❑ Murmur: underlying shunts and cardiac valve pathology

Pulmonary examination
❑ Basal rales: Suggestive of congestive heart failure
❑ Wheeze may be because of asthma or COPD
❑ Increased tactile vocal fermitus, egophony and dull on percussion may indicate underlying pneumonia

Abdominal examination
❑ Ascitis: Liver failure, heart failure, kidney failure
❑ Organomegaly: Liver failure, portal hypertension, hepatic encephalopathy
❑ Distended bladder: urinary obstruction leading urinary track infection.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Treatment

[1][2]

Do's

Dont's

References

  1. "http://psychiatryonline.org/content.aspx?bookID=28&sectionID=1663978". External link in |title= (help)
  2. "Matching the Environment to Patients with Delirium: Lessons Learned from the Delirium Room, a Restraint‐Free Environment for Older Hospitalized Adults with Delirium - Flaherty-2011 - Journal of the American Geriatrics Society - Wiley Online Library".


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