| Literature DB >> 23270646 |
Rodrigo Cavallazzi1, Mohamed Saad, Paul E Marik.
Abstract
Delirium is characterized by a disturbance of consciousness with accompanying change in cognition. Delirium typically manifests as a constellation of symptoms with an acute onset and a fluctuating course. Delirium is extremely common in the intensive care unit (ICU) especially amongst mechanically ventilated patients. Three subtypes have been recognized: hyperactive, hypoactive, and mixed. Delirium is frequently undiagnosed unless specific diagnostic instruments are used. The CAM-ICU is the most widely studied and validated diagnostic instrument. However, the accuracy of this tool may be less than ideal without adequate training of the providers applying it. The presence of delirium has important prognostic implications; in mechanically ventilated patients it is associated with a 2.5-fold increase in short-term mortality and a 3.2-fold increase in 6-month mortality. Nonpharmacological approaches, such as physical and occupational therapy, decrease the duration of delirium and should be encouraged. Pharmacological treatment for delirium traditionally includes haloperidol; however, more data for haloperidol are needed given the paucity of placebo-controlled trials testing its efficacy to treat delirium in the ICU. Second-generation antipsychotics have emerged as an alternative for the treatment of delirium, and they may have a better safety profile. Dexmedetomidine may prove to be a valuable adjunctive agent for patients with delirium in the ICU.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23270646 PMCID: PMC3539890 DOI: 10.1186/2110-5820-2-49
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Figure 1Factors leading to delirium.
Instruments for the diagnosis of delirium in the ICU
| Abbreviated Cognitive Test for delirium [ | Total score obtained by summing up two content scores: attention (range 0–14) and memory (range 0–10) | Memory is assessed by recognition of pictured objects. Attention is assessed using the visual memory span subtest of the Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised. | <11 |
| Confusion Assessment Method for the ICU [ | The instrument assesses four features: 1) acute onset of mental status changes or fluctuating course; 2) inattention; 3) disorganized thinking; 4) altered level of consciousness | Feature 1: assess for acute change in mental status, fluctuating behavior or serial Glasgow Coma Score or sedation ratings over 24 hours. Feature 2: assess using picture recognition or random letter test. Feature 3: assess by asking the patient to hold up a certain number of fingers. Feature 4: rate level of consciousness from alert to coma. | Features 1 or 2 are positive, along with either Feature 2 or Feature 4 |
| Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist [ | Checklist of eight items: altered level of consciousness, inattention, disorientation, hallucination or delusion, psychomotor agitation or retardation, inappropriate mood or speech, sleep/wake cycle disturbance, and symptom fluctuation. The presence of each item of the scale is attributed one point. | The scale is completed based on information collected from the entire shift. Items scored in a structured way with definitions available for every item. | ≥4 |
| Neelon and Champagne Confusion Scale [ | The scale is divided into three subscales: 1) information processing (attention, processing and orientation); 2) behavior (appearance, motor and verbal behavior); and 3) physiological condition (vital function, oxygen saturation, and urinary incontinence). The subscales contain a total of nine items. The score ranges from 0 through 30. Each item is scored according to the severity of the symptom. | Information based on observations by nurses at bedside. Items scored in a structured way with definitions available for every item. | Moderate to severe delirium (0–19); mild to early delirium (20–24); at high risk for delirium (25–26); no delirium (27–30) |
| Delirium Detection Score [ | Eight criteria: agitation, anxiety, hallucination, orientation, seizures, tremor, paroxysmal sweating, and altered sleep-wake rhythm. Each criterion has four severity levels and accounts for 0, 1, 4, or 7 points depending on severity of the symptom. | Assessment performed during each shift by the treating physician and nurse who used a form with the items and definitions. The highest score in each shift was recorded. Items scored in a structured way with definitions available for every item. | >7 |
| Nursing Delirium Screening Scale [ | This scale contains five items: disorientation (verbal or behavioral manifestation of not being oriented to time or place or misperceiving persons in the environment); inappropriate behavior (behavior inappropriate to place and/or for the person, such as pulling at tubes or dressings, attempting to get out of bed when that is contraindicated, and the like); inappropriate communication (communication inappropriate to place and/or for the person, such as incoherence, noncommunicativeness, nonsensical or unintelligible speech); illusions/hallucinations (seeing or hearing things that are not there or distortions of visual objects); and psychomotor retardation (delayed responsiveness or few or no spontaneous actions/words). Symptoms are rated from 0 to 2 based on the presence and intensity of each symptom. Total score is obtained from the addition of the symptom ratings. Maximal score is 10. | Assessment performed per shift by bedside nurses. | >1 |
Figure 2Proposed strategy for the initial management of patients with delirium in the ICU.
Clinical trials evaluating antipsychotics in critically ill patients with delirium.
| Reade [ | 20 | Mechanical ventilation, inability to extubate because of agitation | Dexmedetomidine 0.2-0.7 mcg/kg/h (loading dose was optional) Haloperidol 0.5-2 mg/h (loading dose was optional) | No | Computer-generated random sequence | Time from commencement of study drug to extubation | Patients on dexmedetomidine were extubated sooner than those on haloperidol: 9.9 (IQR 7.3-24) vs. 42.5 (IQR 23.2-117.8) hours, |
| Girard [ | 101 | Mechanical ventilation, abnormal level of consciousness, receipt of sedative or analgesic medications | Haloperidol 5 mg Ziprasidone 40 mg placebo. Second dose administered 12 hours after the first if QT < 500 msec; then every 6 hours. | Yes | Computer-generated, permuted-block randomization scheme | Number of days alive without delirium or coma | No significant difference in number of days alive without delirium or coma. |
| Devlin [ | 36 | ICU patients with delirium and an order for as-needed haloperidol | Quetiapine 50 mg every 12 hours titrated upwards on a daily basis if haloperidol was needed. Placebo. | Yes | Computer-generated random sequence | Time to first resolution of delirium | Time to first resolution was shorter with Quetiapine therapy than with placebo, |
| Skrobik [ | 73 | ICU patients with delirium | Haloperidol 2.5-5 mg every 8 hours Olanzapine 5 mg daily | Only those assessing outcomes | Even/odds day basis | Not specified | No difference in delirium index scores, |
IQR, interquartile range.