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Page 1: Delirium (or: It's not a bloody UTI)

Delirium

(or: It's not a bloody UTI)

Graeme HoyleConsultant Geriatrician

Page 2: Delirium (or: It's not a bloody UTI)

Overview

• What is delirium?• Why is it important?• How to recognise it• How to manage it

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Case History

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OOH GP admission to medicine• Thanks for seeing Jeannie, 85, who's normally

independent.• Neighbours concerned as she was wandering

the Sheltered Housing complex confused and partially dressed.

• When I attended, house a mess, struggling to get out of bed, doubly incontinent.

• Drugs: Aspirin, frusemide 40mg, ramipril 2.5mg, codydramol, amitriptyline 10mg, oxybutynin, ferrous sulphate

• Dx: Not coping at home. – ?UTI

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3 Major Errors

1. Nobody is independent– This only seems to be a problem for old

people

2. Everyone is admitted to hospital because they're not coping at home– We only point this out for old people

3. It's usually not a UTI– It's never just a UTI

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Delirium

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Delirium

• ‘Acute confusional state’• Known about for a long time• Why does a UTI make you confused?

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Why is delirium important?

• Delirium:– Is very common (1/3 of elderly admissions)– Has a high mortality (10-26%)– Has high rates of morbidity (LoS, instit.)

• Despite this, delirium:– Is under-recognised– Is under-diagnosed– Is poorly managed

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Pathology

• Poorly understood• Neurotransmitters

– ACh, Dopa• Inflammatory process

– High levels of inflam cytokines• Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis

– Overactivity with hypercortisolism– Leads to inflammatory process

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Aetiology

• Predisposing vs. Precipitating factors• A highly susceptible person only needs

a minor insult to develop delirium• A fit person requires a major insult to

develop delirium (eg pneumonia – CURB)

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Predisposing factors

• Old age• Frailty• Dementia• Past history of delirium• Visual/hearing impairment• Malnutrition• Polypharmacy• Comorbidity (esp. renal/hepatic impairment)

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Precipitating factors

• Infection• Dehydration• Constipation• Pain• Immobility• Medication use/withdrawal• Sleep deprivation• Catheterisation• Use of physical restraints

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Clinical features

1) Altered level of consciousness2) Cognitive deficit or perceptual disturbance3) Acute onset, fluctuating course4) Evidence of cause

(also frequently altered sleep-wake cycle, emotional lability)

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Forms of delirium

• Hyperactive– Vigilant, agitated, wandering

• Hypoactive– Drowsy, apathetic, frequently missed– More common, higher morbidity

• Mixed

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Management - overview

1) Assessment and screening2) Prevention3) Treatment4) Complications5) Discharge6) Follow up

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1) Assessment and screening

• At admission:– Identify those with delirium– Identify those at risk of developing delirium

• Screening tests:– AMT

• Delirium or dementia?– HISTORY IS KEY– SQiD

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SQiD

'Do you think …….. has been more confused lately?'

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Assessment (cont’d) – identification of those at risk

• Old age• Frailty• Dementia• Past history of delirium• Visual/hearing impairment• Malnutrition• Polypharmacy• Comorbidity (esp. renal/hepatic impairment)

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2) Prevention

• Identify those at risk• Avoid/rapidly treat precipitating factors• Review drugs

– Stop anticholinergic medication (eg TCAD)– Reduce or stop benzodiazepines

• Management as per established delirium

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Precipitating factors

• Infection• Dehydration• Constipation• Pain• Immobility• Medication use/withdrawal• Sleep deprivation• Catheterisation• Use of physical restraints

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3) Treatment of delirium

• Identify and treat precipitating factors– Full HISTORY and examination (inc PR)– FBC, U&E’s, LFT’s, Ca, CRP, TFTs, Glc– ECG– CXR

• Non - pharmacological management• Pharmacological management

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Non-pharmacological management

= being nice to your granny

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Preventing & managing delirium

• Reorient patients to environment and time • Encourage early mobility and self-care (early

involvement of multidisciplinary team) • Maintain fluid intake and nutrition • Correction of sensory impairment (spectacles

and hearing aids) • Avoid constipation

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Preventing & managing delirium

• Normalise sleep-wake cycle– discourage daytime naps – ensure undisturbed night-time rest in a quiet room

with low-level lighting• Ensure continuity of care

– avoid frequent ward or room transfers• Avoid urinary catheterisation• Avoid physical restraint

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Management of the agitated patient

• Talk to the patient before reaching for the needle

• Reorientate and reassure • Adopt a non-confrontational approach:

– do not argue – tactfully disagree with abnormal beliefs – change the subject of conversation – acknowledge patient’s feelings whilst ignoring the

content of their speech• Involve family / carers

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Pharmacological management

• Sedation/antipsychotics should only be used as second-line measures in the following situations:– To allow essential investigation or

treatment – To prevent patient endangering themselves

or others – Relief of distress in an agitated or

hallucinating patient

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What drug to use?• Haloperidol has greatest evidence-base• Small doses, titrated as needed - 0.5-1mg orally, 1mg im/iv, Max 5mg/24h• Avoid benzodiazepines unless

– Alcohol withdrawal– Sensitivity to antipsychotics (PD, LBD – even then,

consider quetiapine)• ALWAYS document in notes• Consider Adults with Incapacity Form

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4) Complications

• Complications in delirium result from:– Immobility (e.g. pressure sores, nosocomial

infection, DVT/PE) – Instability (falls) – Iatrogenic disease (over-sedation) – Malnutrition and dehydration

• Screening, early recognition and early management (using multidisciplinary team) is essential

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5) Discharge

• Delirium is a risk factor for dementia– ?delirium uncovering latent dementia– ?brain damage caused by delirium

• Adequate functional assessment and discharge planning essential following resolution of delirium

• May retain unpleasant memories of delirium– support, counselling and information for patient

and family

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6) Follow up

• May be persistent delirium for up to 1 year

• Follow up assessment of cognitive function important - ?dementia

• ? Formal psych review• Document Dx of delirium on discharge

letter – high risk of further delirium

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OOH GP admission to medicine• Thanks for seeing Jeannie, 85, who's normally

independent.• Neighbours concerned as she was wandering

the Sheltered Housing complex confused and partially dressed.

• When I attended, house a mess, struggling to get out of bed, doubly incontinent.

• Drugs: Aspirin, frusemide 40mg, ramipril 2.5mg, codydramol, amitriptyline 10mg, oxybutynin, ferrous sulphate

• Dx: Not coping at home. – ?UTI

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In AMAU

• Not making much sense: tells you she has to get home as she's going to the shops tomorrow

• Febrile, smells of urine, dry• AMT 5/10

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What do you do next?

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History!

• Mildly forgetful• No care• Recent fall and hurt knee

• PR exam: faecal impaction• Urine dipstick: blood/prot/nitrites/pus

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Bloods

• Na 132• K 3.8• Urea 13• Creat 83

• CRP 86

• Hb 138• MCV 88• Plt 385• WCC 15.2 • Neut 13.2

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What's your Diagnosis?

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• Delirium, secondary to:• Constipation• Dehydration• UTI• Drugs• Probable background cognitive impairment

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What's your management?

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Management

• Stop drugs– Frusemide, codydramol, amitriptyline, oxybutynin, iron

• Rehydrate• Laxatives• Empirical antibiotics for UTI• Early MDT assessment• Early mobilisation• Aim for early discharge

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Agitated and wandering at night

What do you do?

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2 days later, much better

What's your advice to GP?


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