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Delirium may resemble psychiatric emergency

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Delirium may resemble psychiatric emergency Yana M. Van Arsdale, MD, PhD Is it delirium or psychosis? A 67 y/o homeless single caucasian male was brought to a ER by ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Delirium may resemble psychiatric emergency


1
Delirium may resemble psychiatric emergency
  • Yana M. Van Arsdale, MD, PhD

2
Is it delirium or psychosis?
  • A 67 y/o homeless single caucasian male was
    brought to a ER by the police
  • Unkempt, dirty, disheveled, and smells of urine
    and feces
  • Does not look at the interviewer
  • Does not respond to most of questions

3
Is it delirium or psychosis?
  • Knows his name
  • Does not know the date
  • Can not describe the events that led to his
    admission
  • Complains on tooth ache, requests Vicodin

4
Is it delirium or psychosis?
  • Appears tense guarded
  • Considers that it might be some conspiracy around
    him
  • Denies any problems other than toothache
  • Denies any drug/alcohol abuse
  • Asks to let him go home

5
Is it delirium or psychosis?
  • UDS amphetamine, opioids, THC
  • BAC neg
  • UA ketones, bacteria, leukocytes
  • CBC anemia, leukocytosis
  • CT head old CVA
  • ECG old MI
  • MMSE- 8/30, says he cant read/count

6
Definition
  • Acute confusional state
  • Transient global disorder of cognition
  • Generalized cerebral dysfunction
  • Not a disease
  • A syndrome

7
Definition
  • Usually reversible
  • Multiple causes
  • Presents with wide range of neuropsychiatric
    abnormalities

8
DSM-IV-TR criteria
  • Disturbance of consciousness
  • Reduced clarity of awareness of the environment
  • Reduced ability to focus, sustain or shift
    attention

9
DSM-IV-TR criteria
  • A change in cognition
  • Memory deficit
  • Disorientation
  • Language disturbance
  • Perceptual disturbance

10
DSM-IV-TR criteria
  • Disturbance develops over a short period of time
  • Hours to days
  • Fluctuates during the course of the day

11
DSM-IV-TR criteria
  • Evidence from the
  • History
  • Physical examination
  • Laboratory findings
  • General medical condition (GMC)
  • Substance intoxication/withdrawal
  • Multiple etiologies

12
Hallmark of delirium
  • Waxing and waning type of confusion

13
Challenge
  • Delirium is often unrecognized
  • Misdiagnosed
  • Medical Emergency
  • Mistaken for
  • acute psychosis
  • mania
  • depression
  • dementia/old age
  • dissociation

14
Limitations of our presentation
  • Dementia
  • Depression
  • Epidemiology
  • Physical examination
  • Laboratory findings
  • Tx

15
History
  • Latin term meaning off track
  • Was recognized by Hippocrates
  • Sutton described Delirium Tremens in 1813
  • Wernicke described acute encephalopathy that
    bears his name

16
Pathophysiology
  • Based on the state of arousal
  • 3 types are described
  • Hyperactive
  • Hypoactive
  • Mixed

17
Hyperactive delirium
  • Alcohol withdrawal
  • Alcohol intoxication
  • PCP intoxication
  • LSD intoxication

18
Hypoactive delirium
  • Hepatic encephalopathy
  • Hypercapnea

19
Mixed delirium
  • Daytime sedation
  • Nocturnal agitation
  • Sundowning phenomena

20
Mechanism
  • Not understood
  • Reversible cerebral oxidative metabolism
  • Multiple transmitter abnormalities

21
Acetylcholine
  • Crucial neurotransmitter
  • Decreased activity in the brain
  • Anticholinergic activity is increased
  • Alzheimer disease particular susceptibility

22
Acetylcholine
  • Too many prescribed medications with
    anticholinergic activity most common cause
  • Rx Physostigmine salicylate (Antilirium) 1-2 mg
    IV/IM Q15-30 Tx of anticholinergic toxicity

23
Neurotransmitters
  • Norepinephrine
  • Alcohol withdrawal
  • Serotonin
  • Sepsis
  • SSRI
  • LSD
  • Hepatic encephalopathy

24
Neurotransmitters
  • Dopamine relieve with antipsychotic Tx
  • Glutamate
  • GABA
  • Hepatic encephalopathy increase
  • Benzodiazepine/alcohol withdrawal - decrease

25
Other mechanisms
  • Circadian rhythms disruption
  • Cortisol
  • Beta endorphines
  • Exogenous glucocorticoids

26
Other mechanisms
  • Cytokines interleukin-1 (endogenous pyrogen)
    -6
  • Head trauma
  • Ischemia
  • Toxins
  • Infection

27
Other mechanisms
  • Sleep deprivation
  • Psychosocial stress in brain compromise

28
Neuroanatomy
  • Reticular formation (RF) of the brainstem
  • Area regulates
  • attention
  • arousal
  • Locus ceruleus its noradrenergic neurons
    alcohol withdrawal

29
Pathway
  • Dorsal tegmental
  • Projects from the mesencephalic RF to the
  • tectum
  • thalamus

30
Differential Dx
  • Schizophreniform DO
  • Schizophrenia
  • Brief psychotic DO
  • Manic episode
  • Depressive episode
  • Dissociative DO
  • Factitious DO
  • Malingering

31
DDx Factitious DO/ Malingering
  • Inconsistency of mental status
  • Different behavior without supervision
  • Secondary gain/ assuming sick role
  • Intentionally produced

32
DDx Schizophreniform DO
  • Delusions/hallucinations
  • more constant
  • better organized
  • Level of consciousness / arousal unchanged
  • Orientation no change

33
DDx Schizophreniform DO
  • VH/ tactile not typical
  • Thought disturbances
  • loose associations
  • tangentiality
  • derailment

34
Treatment
  • Underlying cause
  • Precautions, including 1on 1 supervision
  • Environmental modification
  • Reorientation techniques
  • Memory cues
  • Family member present
  • Explanation of procedures

35
Treatment
  • Avoid
  • Overstimulation
  • Sensory deprivation (black-patch delirium)
  • Physical restraints

36
Treatment
  • Restraints aggression/agitation
  • Chemical
  • Physical
  • Minimize pharmacotherapy
  • Discontinue as many medications as possible
  • Sleep
  • Fluid nutrition

37
Treatment
  • Medical Evaluation
  • conclusive - admission
  • inconclusive - observation

38
Special concerns
  • Alternative medicine products use
  • Herbs use / abuse
  • Jimson weed
  • Mandrake
  • Henbane
  • Detailed drug/medications Hx imperative
  • Delirium may be the ONLY presenting symptom

39
Complications
  • Wandering getting lost
  • Falls combative behavior injuries
  • Seizures
  • Malnutrition, fluid electrolyte abnormalities
  • Aspiration pneumonia
  • Pressure ulcers
  • Decreased function mobility

40
Prognosis
  • Worse
  • Poor premorbid cognitive functioning
  • Previous Hx delirium
  • Brain disease
  • Multiple causes / risk factors
  • Old age
  • Better
  • High premorbid cognitive functioning

41
Family/Pt Education
  • Etiology course
  • Result of medical condition or substance
  • Rapid fluctuation of mental condition
  • Reversible / temporary most cases
  • Risk factors prevention in a future

42
Family/Pt Education
  • Out of proportion with premorbid behavior
  • Visit the Pt
  • One at a time
  • Provide reorientation
  • Familiar objects (photos, decorations, etc)
  • Avoid overstimulation

43
Prevention
  • Should be the goal
  • High risk close monitoring
  • Multicomponent intervention
  • Sleep deprivation
  • Medical conditions
  • Cognitive impairment, etc
  • Prescribing practices avoid polypharmacy

44
Legal pitfalls Failure to
  • Recognize alcohol withdrawal in the Pt with
    altered mental status (AMS) /or abnormal vital
    signs
  • Tx the Pt with AMS
  • Exclude other etiologies of delirium
  • Admit

45
Legal pitfalls
  • Determining whether the PT has the capacity to
    make informed decision
  • Capacity is usually not globally impaired unless
    impairment is severe
  • Competence is a legal term, determined by the
    judge, not the physician

46
Legal pitfalls
  • Surrogate decision-making laws - differ from
    state to state
  • Elopement precautions must be taken (The Pt
    might be lost or/ injured)
  • Fall / Suicide precautions
  • Leaving the hospital AMA - urgent legal assistance
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