| Literature DB >> 18495054 |
Timothy D Girard1, Pratik P Pandharipande, E Wesley Ely.
Abstract
Delirium, an acute and fluctuating disturbance of consciousness and cognition, is a common manifestation of acute brain dysfunction in critically ill patients, occurring in up to 80% of the sickest intensive care unit (ICU) populations. Critically ill patients are subject to numerous risk factors for delirium. Some of these, such as exposure to sedative and analgesic medications, may be modified to reduce risk. Although dysfunction of other organ systems continues to receive more clinical attention, delirium is now recognized to be a significant contributor to morbidity and mortality in the ICU, and it is recommended that all ICU patients be monitored using a validated delirium assessment instrument. Patients with delirium have longer hospital stays and lower 6-month survival than do patients without delirium, and preliminary research suggests that delirium may be associated with cognitive impairment that persists months to years after discharge. Little evidence exists regarding the prevention and treatment of delirium in the ICU, but multicomponent interventions reduce the incidence of delirium in non-ICU studies. Strategies for the prevention and treatment of ICU delirium are the subjects of multiple ongoing investigations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18495054 PMCID: PMC2391269 DOI: 10.1186/cc6149
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Risk factors for delirium in ICU patients
| Host factors | Factors of critical illness | Iatrogenic factors |
| Age (older) | Acidosis | Immobilization (for example, catheters, restraints) |
| Alcoholism | Anemia | Medications (for example, opioids, benzodiazepines) |
| APOE4 polymorphism | Fever/infection/sepsis | Sleep disturbances |
| Cognitive impairment | Hypotension | |
| Depression | Metabolic disturbances (for example, sodium, calcium, BUN, bilirubin) | |
| Hypertension | ||
| Smoking | Respiratory disease | |
| Vision/hearing impairment | High severity of illness |
The table includes factors associated with delirium in both intensive care unit (ICU) and non-ICU studies. APOE4, apolipoprotein E4; BUN, blood urea nitrogen.
Figure 1Lorazepam and the probability of transitioning to delirium. The probability of transitioning to delirium increased with the dose of lorazepam administered during the previous 24 hours. This incremental risk was large at low doses and plateaued at approximately 20 mg/day. Data from Pandharipande and coworkers [40].
The Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist
| Checklist Item | Description |
| Altered level of consciousnessa | |
| A | No response |
| B | Response to intense and repeated stimulation |
| C | Response to mild or moderate stimulation |
| D | Normal wakefulness |
| E | Exaggerated response to normal stimulation |
| Inattentiveness | Difficulty following instructions or easily distracted |
| Disorientation | To time, place, or person |
| Hallucination-delusion-psychosis | Clinical manifestation or suggestive behavior |
| Psychomotor agitation or retardation | Agitation requiring use of drugs or restraints, or slowing |
| Inappropriate speech or mood | Related to events or situation, or incoherent speech |
| Sleep/wake cycle disturbance | Sleeping <4 hours/day, waking at night, sleeping all day |
| Symptom fluctuation | Symptoms above occurring intermittently |
| Total score | 0 to 8 |
aIf A or B, then no other items are assessed that day. Data are from Bergeron and coworkers [8].
Figure 2The Confusion Assessment Method for the Intensive Care Unit. *Level of consciousness (depth of sedation) is assessed using the Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale (RASS) [54,55]. †Content of consciousness is assessed (delirium is diagnosed) using the Confusion Assessment Method for the ICU (CAM-ICU) [50,53]. When three of four diagnostic features are present (either features 1, 2, and 3, or features 1, 2, and 4), delirium is diagnosed. Data from Ely and coworkers [50] and the CAM-ICU training manual [51].
Interventions for the prevention and treatment of ICU delirium
| Intervention | Effecta | Supporting evidenceb |
| Nonpharmacologic | ||
| Multicomponent strategy | Prevention | Non-ICU clinical trials [56,58] |
| Geriatrics consultation | Prevention | Non-ICU clinical trials [57] |
| Reduced benzodiazepine use | Prevention | Prospective ICU cohort studies [40] |
| Pharmacologic | ||
| Haloperidol | Both | Placebo-controlled, randomized, non-ICU trial [62] |
| Olanzapine | Treatment | Non-randomized ICU trial [63] |
| Adequate analgesia | Prevention | Prospective non-ICU cohort studies [45] |
| Dexmedetomidine | Prevention | Randomized ICU trials [68,69] |
aAlthough each intervention may have a role in both the prevention and treatment of intensive care unit (ICU) delirium, most have only been studied in one role or the other. bReferences highlight prototypical studies and do not represent an exhaustive review of the literature.