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Delirium in the Older Adult Patient: Not Just Altered Mental Status Lisa R. Mack, MD, FACEP Assistant Professor Emergency Medicine Emory University, Atlanta,

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Presentation on theme: "Delirium in the Older Adult Patient: Not Just Altered Mental Status Lisa R. Mack, MD, FACEP Assistant Professor Emergency Medicine Emory University, Atlanta,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Delirium in the Older Adult Patient: Not Just Altered Mental Status Lisa R. Mack, MD, FACEP Assistant Professor Emergency Medicine Emory University, Atlanta, GA June 14, 2003 Georgia College of Emergency Physicians St. Simons Island, Georgia

2 Goal  For you to recognize delirium as a specific disease entity and to begin ruling it in or out in your patients with AMS

3 Objectives 1. Identify the 4 risk factors for delirium 2. Identify the 4 features of the CAM diagnostic algorithm and the criteria for diagnosing delirium 3. Identify the top 3 causes of delirium 4. State the pharmacological treatment for delirium

4 Delirium?  Case 1: Patient dozes off when you’re trying to talk to him…  Case 2: Mr. P. keeps picking at his bed clothes as you try to talk to him…  Case 3: The nurse asks you to prescribe something to stop Mrs. B from being agitated, but when you go in to see her she “looks fine”…

5 Definition  Older adult= age > 65  Delirium= A disturbance of consciousness and an acute change in cognition or perception  3 types:  Hyperactive (22-30%)  Hypoactive (24-26%)  Mixed (42-46%)

6 Why Important?  In 2000, a consensus panel identified delirium as 1of 3 target conditions for quality improvement in older patients*  Missed diagnosis in up to 67% of pts.  Up to 55% of ED patients*  Prevalence in ED is 9.6 % *  Bundled as “AMS” by ED physicians *Sloss, EM, et al. J Am Geriatric Soc. 2000 *Hustey, FM et al. Academic EM 2000 *Elie, M. Et al. CMAJ 2000

7 Why Important? cont.  Under-recognized as a disease entity  Case 1, 2, 3  Increased morbidity/mortality*  Increased costs  Majority of causes are reversible  Potentially preventable *Kakuma, R et al. J Am Ger Soc. April 2003

8 Prevention  1993 Inouye identified 4 independent and cumulative risk factors:  Vision impairment  Severe illness (APACHE II score <16)  Cognitive impairment  Dehydration

9 Prevention cont.  1999, Inouye et al NEJM: “ A multicomponent intervention to prevent delirium in hospitalized older patients.” -Delirium developed in 9.9% of interventional group vs 15% control -Improvement in cognition and reduction in use of sleep medication were significant -Delirium prevented, but no impact on severity or recurrence once it developed

10 What we know: *Intervention before onset reduces delirium* *A validated assessment tool exists (CAM); 95-100% sens.; 89-100% spec. + So why are we frequently missing the diagnosis? *Inouye, SK et al. NEJM 1999; AGS Mtg May 2003 few studies ongoing + Ely, EW et al.Crit Care Med 2001; Monette, J et al General Hosp Psych 2001

11 Barriers to diagnosis  Individual patient presentation  The presentation of severe illness in older people  Differential diagnosis  Vascular dementia may present w/acute cognitive decline  Hypoactive delirium may be mistaken for depression

12 The Diagnosis  Delirium is a clinical diagnosis  The criteria: Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) 1. Inattention 2. Acute onset and fluctuating symptoms 3. Altered level of consciousness 4. Disorganized thinking Must have 1 and 2 and either 3 or 4

13 Inattention  Inability to shift attention (Perseverance)  Inability to focus  Simple test:  Recite the days of the week backward  Digit span test (repeat 5 numbers forward without errors)

14 Acute onset/fluctuating  Sxs usually present for <2 weeks  May fluctuate over the course of minutes to hours (Ask caregiver)

15 Altered Level of Consciousness Hyperactive vs hypoactive  Alert (normal)  Vigilant  Lethargic (drowsy, but easily aroused)  Stupor  Coma

16 Disorganized Thinking  Rambling  Illogical conversation

17 Management 1. Recognize and treat the underlying cause 2. Modify the environment 3. Control the symptoms

18 Etiologies Top 3 causes: 1. Infection 2. Metabolic disturbances 3. Medications -anticholinergics -opiates

19 Etiologies cont.  AMI  CVA  Drug withdrawal The work-up therefore reflects the above: CBC, Chem, U/A, CXR, ECG, +CT scan, +Drug screen

20 Environment  Keeping patient oriented to time/place  Adequate lighting, routine sleep times  Involving friends/family

21 Symptom control  First-line treatment= Haloperidol  Least anticholinergic activity  Rapid onset  Dose: 0.25- 0.5 mg, max 5mg/24hr  BDZs= first-line tx in ETOH w/drawal  Lorazepam 0.25-1 mg, titrate

22 Symptom control cont.  Haloperidol plus lorazepam  Synergistic effect  Allows for lower doses of haloperidol and therefore reduced extrapyramidal effects Note: BDZs can actually cause a paradoxical reaction of agitation

23 Summary  Delirium is misdiagnosed in up to 55% of ED patients  The 4 risk factors of delirium are:  The 4 features of the CAM are:  The top 3 causes of delirium are:  The drugs used to control symptoms are:

24 Take Home Points  Delirium is not a just “AMS”  ED physicians need to recognize delirium as a distinct disease entity  ED physicians need to recognize risk factors for delirium to assist in prevention

25 Questions???


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