| Literature DB >> 28741278 |
Giuseppe Bellelli1, Alessandro Morandi1, Marco Trabucchi1, Guido Caironi2, Daniele Coen2, Carlo Fraticelli2, Ciro Paolillo2, Carolina Prevaldi2, Angela Riccardi2, Gianfranco Cervellin2, Corrado Carabellese3, Salvatore Putignano3, Stefania Maggi4, Antonio Cherubini4, Paola Gnerre5, Andrea Fontanella5, Nicola Latronico6, Concezione Tommasino6, Antonio Corcione6, Giovanni Ricevuti7, Nicola Ferrara7, Francesco De Filippi8, Alberto Ferrari8, Mario Guarino9, Maria Pia Ruggieri9, Pietro Amedeo Modesti10,11, Carlo Locatelli12, Patrizia Hrelia12, Marco Otto Toscano13, Emi Bondi13, Antonio Tarasconi14, Luca Ansaloni14, Francesco Perticone15.
Abstract
Delirium is a severe neuropsychiatric syndrome characterized by inattention and global cognitive dysfunction in the setting of an acute medical illness, medical complication, drug intoxication, or drug withdrawal. The most important risk factors are advanced age and dementia, whereas pain, dehydration, infections, stroke, metabolic disturbances, and surgery are the most common triggering factors. Although delirium is a common clinical syndrome in different settings of care (acute care hospitals, inpatient rehabilitation facilities, nursing homes, and hospices), it often remains under-recognized, poorly understood, and inadequately managed. There exists a clear need for improved understanding to overcome cultural stereotypes, and for the development and dissemination of a comprehensive model of implementation of general good practice points. A network of Italian national scientific societies was thus convened (1) to develop a collaborative multidisciplinary initiative report on delirium in elderly hospitalized patients, (2) to focus the attention of health care personnel on prevention, diagnosis, and therapy of patients suffering from delirium, and (3) to make the health services research community and policy-makers more aware of the potential risks of this condition providing a reference for training activities and data collection.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical management; Cognitive decline; Consensus; Delirium
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28741278 DOI: 10.1007/s11739-017-1705-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intern Emerg Med ISSN: 1828-0447 Impact factor: 3.397