Delirium in the hospitalized elderly.
Publication/Presentation Date
1-1-1994
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As many as one third of elderly hospitalized patients become delirious, and most do not fully recover. Delirium may impart a higher mortality rate and may be a marker for future cognitive decline.
OBJECTIVE: To review the clinical features, etiology, diagnosis, and management of delirium in elderly hospitalized patients.
SUMMARY: Delirium can be caused by primary intracranial disease, systemic diseases, withdrawal from alcohol or sedative hypnotic agents, or drug intoxication, the most common cause. Because delirium may present with diverse clinical features, physicians should suspect it in any elderly patient with a change in mental status, personality, or behavior. Bedside screening tools may help distinguish delirium from dementia and psychosis. Causative factors should be sought and removed or treated. Anticholinergic drugs are the worst offenders, but all drugs are suspect and should be discontinued or reduced in dosage. If a sedative is needed, haloperidol is the drug of choice. Because of the prevalence and seriousness of alcohol withdrawal, all delirious patients should receive intravenous thiamine to reduce the risk of Wernicke's encephalopathy.
CONCLUSIONS: An organized, systematic approach with early diagnosis and treatment may prove to be life-saving in many patients.
Volume
61
Issue
4
First Page
258
Last Page
262
ISSN
0891-1150
Published In/Presented At
Sumner, A. D., & Simons, R. J. (1994). Delirium in the hospitalized elderly. Cleveland Clinic journal of medicine, 61(4), 258–262. https://doi.org/10.3949/ccjm.61.4.258
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
7923743
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article