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Delirium in the acute hospital

Delirium in the acute hospital. Dr Louise Allan Clinical Senior Lecturer and Honorary Consultant Geriatrician  British Geriatrics Society. What is delirium?. What is delirium?. Acute brain failure It can be acute without previous brain failure It can be recurrent

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Delirium in the acute hospital

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  1. Delirium in the acute hospital Dr Louise Allan Clinical Senior Lecturer and Honorary Consultant Geriatrician  British Geriatrics Society

  2. What is delirium?

  3. What is delirium? • Acute brain failure • It can be acute without previous brain failure • It can be recurrent • Acute on chronic (previous chronic brain failure aka dementia) • It can lead to chronic brain failure

  4. What is delirium? DSM IV criteria • Disturbance of consciousness (ie, reduced clarity of awareness of the environment) occurs, with reduced ability to focus, sustain, or shift attention. • Change in cognition (eg, memory deficit, disorientation, language disturbance, perceptual disturbance) occurs that is not better accounted for by a preexisting, established, or evolving dementia. • The disturbance develops over a short period (usually hours to days) and tends to fluctuate during the course of the day. • Evidence from the history, physical examination, or laboratory findings is present that indicates the disturbance is caused by a direct physiologic consequence of a general medical condition, an intoxicating substance, medication use, or more than one cause.

  5. What is delirium? • Change in consciousness or alertness • Change in cognition • Memory • Thinking • Perception (the senses) • Behaviour • It happens over a short period • It goes up and down • It is usually caused by a physical illness

  6. Behaviours • Just “more confused” • Poor attention- can’t give a history • Looks around the room • Agitated, plucking at bed clothes • Hallucinating • Very quiet or drowsy • Reduced ability to care for self • Loss of mobility

  7. Three types of delirium • Hyperactive • Hypoactive • Mixed

  8. Why is it important? • It’s the cognitive “superbug”

  9. Why is it important? • It is often not diagnosed • A common problem • Increased length of stay and complications • Poor outcomes- mortality, admission to care home • It often takes a long time to get better • It doesn’t always get better

  10. Why is it important? • It can be prevented • It can be treated • If it does happen, good care will shorten the duration • Good communication reassures and also provides realistic expectations • Good practice saves money

  11. How common is it? • Delirium is common in acute hospitals e.g. • 22% in general medicine • 28% acute orthopaedics • 80% medical ICU

  12. Who gets delirium?Anyone! • Age over 65 • Dementia • Frailty • Sensory impairment • Severe illness • Recent surgery/ fracture • Drugs • Alcohol

  13. What are the most common causes? • Pain • Infection • Constipation • Hydration • Medication • Environment

  14. How is it diagnosed?Short Confusion Assessment Method 1. Acute onset or fluctuating course AND 2. Inattention AND EITHER 3. Disorganised thinking/ incoherent speech OR 4. Altered level of consciousness

  15. Other features • Memory impairment • Disorientation to time, place or person • Agitation e.g. the patient is repeatedly pulling at her sheets and IV tubing • Retardation • Visual or auditory misinterpretations, illusions, or hallucinations • Change in sleep wake cycle e.g. excessive daytime sleepiness with insomnia at night

  16. How is it prevented? The environment: Avoid: Hearing aids Spectacles Orientation aids Lighting Encourage food and fluid intake Encourage mobility Maintain sleep pattern Involve relatives and carers Constipation Catheters Restraint Sedation Bed or Ward moves Arguing with the patient

  17. How is it treated? • Treat infection • Correct metabolic abnormalities • Correct hypoxia • Review medication but ensure adequate analgesia • Many episodes of delirium are multifactorial • Treat all the underlying causes

  18. After delirium • Frightening experience • Post traumatic stress • Embarrassment • Need for reassurance • Need for information • Need for recognition of dementia after delirium

  19. What are we up against? • Culture • Lack of training • Competition from other patient safety initiatives

  20. THINK DELIRIUM

  21. Table top exercise • Does your group have experience of delirium? • Were you given information about it? • What can you organisation do? • What can the DAA do?

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