Delirium

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Delirium

Neuro

Neuro

Demyelinating disorders: Pathology review
Guillain-Barre syndrome
Cranial nerve pathways
Anatomy of the facial nerve (CN VII)
Cranial nerves rap
Anatomy of the olfactory (CN I) and optic (CN II) nerves
Introduction to the cranial nerves
Anatomy of the trigeminal nerve (CN V)
Anatomy of the oculomotor (CN III), trochlear (CN IV) and abducens (CN VI) nerves
Cranial nerves
Neuron action potential
Muscle weakness: Clinical
Myalgias and myositis: Pathology review
Muscular dystrophies and mitochondrial myopathies: Pathology review
Inflammatory myopathies: Clinical
Cholinergic receptors
Myasthenia gravis
Anatomy and physiology of the eye
Multiple sclerosis
Optic pathways and visual fields
Anatomy of the eye
Photoreception
Transverse myelitis
Nervous system anatomy and physiology
Ascending and descending spinal tracts
Parkinson disease
Basal ganglia: Direct and indirect pathway of movement
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Adult brain tumors: Pathology review
Acoustic neuroma (schwannoma)
Neurocutaneous disorders: Pathology review
Anatomy and physiology of the ear
Auditory transduction and pathways
Conductive hearing loss
Vertigo: Pathology review
Dizziness and vertigo: Clinical
Vertigo
Anatomy of the cerebral cortex
Motor cortex
Lewy body dementia
Pyramidal and extrapyramidal tracts
Vascular dementia
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Dementia: Pathology review
Alzheimer disease
Hypokinetic movement disorders: Clinical
Movement disorders: Pathology review
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Huntington disease
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Seizures: Pathology review
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Disorders of consciousness: Clinical
West Nile Virus Infection
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Traumatic brain injury: Clinical
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Nonbenzodiazepine anticonvulsants
Anticonvulsants and anxiolytics: Benzodiazepines
Anticonvulsants and anxiolytics: Barbiturates
Migraine medications
Brain tumors: Clinical
Concussion and traumatic brain injury
Delirium
Dementia and delirium: Clinical
Amnesia, dissociative disorders and delirium: Pathology review
Toxidromes: Clinical

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Delirium

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External References

First Aid

2024

2023

2022

2021

Anticholinergic drugs

delirium with p. 575

Delirium p. 575

barbiturate withdrawal p. 588

diabetic ketoacidosis p. 355

PCP p. 589

thyroid storm p. 346

Geriatric patients

drug-related delirium in p. 575

Hallucinations p. 576

delirium p. 575

Haloperidol p. 591

delirium p. 575

Hemorrhage

delirium caused by p. 575

Sleep problems

delirium and p. 575

Substance abuse

delirium with p. 575

Urinary retention

delirium p. 575

Transcript

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Content Reviewers

Delirium is a common and very serious neuropsychiatric syndrome.

Typically it affects older patients with multiple medical problems, in fact up to half of all elderly patients in the hospital will have an episode of delirium at some point, but being said it can affect anyone - even children, even though that’s much less common.

So, what is delirium exactly? Well let’s look at a quick example. Let’s say there is an elderly man with diabetes and heart disease, who comes into the hospital with pneumonia.

He might be slowly recovering, even about to go home, and then one evening things change all of the sudden. He might get really hyperactive, and by that I mean that he may get agitated or aggressive with the staff, mumble or say things incoherently, and have disorganized thoughts or even delusions, perhaps talking about things that haven’t happened or happened years ago. He might even hear or see things like hallucinations, and not know where he is or what he’s doing there.

We would call this an episode of delirium, and it can be really scary for him or someone who is taking care of him, especially the first time it happens because it can come out of the blue.

These are the symptoms of what we call hyperactive delirium.

But there’s also hypoactive delirium which is like the flip side of the coin.

As an example, you might have a woman with a history of chronic constipation who has recently come out of back surgery.

If she has hypoactive delirium she might feel suddenly sluggish and drowsy, less reactive and sullen, and might look withdrawn, perhaps because she’s scared of having hallucinations.

These symptoms of both hyperactive and hypoactive delirium can start pretty suddenly and can happen off and on over the course of a few hours to a few days, with some patients having what they call mix state delirium where they are sometimes having hyperactive symptoms and sometimes having hypoactive symptoms.

As you might guess, delirium symptoms can be really tiresome for a patient and can make them sleepy during the day, and keep them up at night - all of which causes massive disruption to a person’s life and to the lives of their friends and family.

Even though this sounds pretty hard to miss, delirium can often go unnoticed or confused with other conditions like dementia, which has some similarities.

To help distinguish delirium from dementia, there are some key differences to keep in mind.

Unlike delirium where the symptoms can start pretty suddenly, patients with dementia typically have a slow mental decline over months to years.

Early on, dementia patients are also generally alert, oriented, have normal behavior, and don’t have hallucinations.

The good news is that unlike dementia, delirium is usually temporary, resolving when the underlying cause is addressed promptly.

Delirium can sometimes resolve within hours to days.

But in other cases, it takes weeks or months to fully resolve.

So what causes delirium? Well the exact mechanism is not well understood, and unlike a lot of diseases there probably is no single cause.

But we do have a lot of clues and these come from understanding the risk factors for getting delirium in the first place.

Patients who have had recent surgery are often at risk for delirium, and it might be related to the effects of certain medications such as narcotic pain medication, benzodiazepines, hypnotics, and anticholinergics as well as the underlying diseases and chronic fatigue from not sleeping well in the hospital.

Since delirium can also cause trouble sleeping, losing sleep can turn into a dangerous cycle that can really worsen the symptoms.