Delirium Fundamentals - Brain Fog Basics
- Definition: Acute confusional state. Key features: sudden onset, fluctuating course, prominent inattention, and altered level of consciousness or disorganized thinking.
- Types:
- Hyperactive: Agitated, restless, often hypervigilant.
- Hypoactive: Lethargic, quiet, withdrawn (frequently missed).
- Mixed: Fluctuates between hyperactive and hypoactive states.
- Epidemiology: Common in elderly patients, hospitalized individuals (ICU, post-operative).
- Significance: Leads to ā morbidity, ā mortality, prolonged hospital stay, ā costs, and ā institutionalization risk.
ā Delirium is a medical emergency and a sign of underlying physiological distress.
Causes & Culprits - The Confusion Catalysts
- Predisposing Factors:
- Age >65 years
- Pre-existing dementia/cognitive impairment
- Sensory impairment (vision, hearing)
- Multiple comorbidities
- Prior delirium episodes
- Precipitating Factors: š I WATCH DEATH
- Infection (UTI, pneumonia)
- Withdrawal (alcohol, benzodiazepines)
- Acute metabolic (electrolytes, glucose, AKI)
- Trauma (head injury, post-operative)
- CNS pathology (stroke, bleed, tumor)
- Hypoxia (PE, COPD)
- Deficiencies (B12, thiamine)
- Endocrinopathies (thyroid, parathyroid)
- Acute vascular (MI, CVA)
- Toxins/Drugs (anticholinergics, opioids, sedatives)
- Heavy metals (rare)
- Pathophysiology (Brief):
- Neurotransmitter imbalance (Acetylcholineā, Dopamineā)
- Neuroinflammation (Cytokinesā)
- Impaired network connectivity

ā Polypharmacy, especially with anticholinergic drugs, is a major reversible risk factor for delirium in older adults.
Spotting Delirium - Diagnosis Detective
- Hallmarks: Acute onset, fluctuating course, inattention (core), disorganized thinking, altered consciousness.
- Also look for: Cognitive deficits, perceptual issues, psychomotor changes, sleep-wake disruption.
Diagnosis:
- Confusion Assessment Method (CAM):
- Feature 1: Acute onset & fluctuating course
- Feature 2: Inattention
- Feature 3: Disorganized thinking
- Feature 4: Altered level of consciousness
- Delirium if: 1 AND 2 AND (3 OR 4)
- 4AT: Rapid tool (score ā„ 4 suggests delirium).
- DSM-5 for formal diagnosis.
ā Inattention is the core diagnostic feature of delirium and must be formally assessed.
Delirium vs. Dementia (Key Differentiators):
- Onset: Acute (Delirium) vs. Insidious (Dementia)
- Attention: Impaired early (Delirium) vs. Late (Dementia)
Managing the Maze - Treatment Tactics
Primary Goal: Identify and treat underlying reversible cause(s).
- Non-Pharmacological (First-Line): Cornerstone of management.
- Environment: Quiet, well-lit room; clocks, calendars for orientation.
- Support: Family presence, reorientation, early mobilization.
- Physiological: Sleep hygiene (avoid daytime naps), hydration, nutrition.
- Sensory: Address impairments (glasses, hearing aids). (e.g., HELP program principles).
- Pharmacological (Severe Agitation/Psychosis Posing Risk):
- Antipsychotics: Use lowest effective dose, short duration.
- Haloperidol 0.5-1 mg PO/IM/IV.
- Risperidone 0.25-0.5 mg PO.
- ā ļø Avoid benzodiazepines (except in alcohol/sedative withdrawal delirium).
- Antipsychotics: Use lowest effective dose, short duration.
ā Non-pharmacological multicomponent interventions are the cornerstone of delirium management and prevention.
Prevention Power - Keeping Clear Heads
- Identify & manage risk factors; proactive geriatric consult.
- Key: Hospital Elder Life Program (HELP) - orientation, activities, mobilization, sleep, vision/hearing aids, hydration.
- Prognosis: Reversible. Delays: āmortality, āhospital stay, āfunction, ādementia risk.
ā The Hospital Elder Life Program (HELP) has been shown to reduce delirium incidence by up to 40% in hospitalized older adults.
HighāYield Points - ā” Biggest Takeaways
- Delirium: acute onset, fluctuating course, with inattention as a core feature.
- Hypoactive delirium is common in elderly, often missed; suspect with acute behavioral change.
- Prevention is key: manage risk factors like dehydration, immobility, sensory impairment.
- Identify and treat precipitating factors: infections, medications, metabolic issues are common.
- Non-pharmacological strategies first: reorientation, promoting sleep, early mobilization.
- Pharmacological: Low-dose antipsychotics (e.g., Haloperidol) for severe agitation; avoid benzodiazepines.
- CAM (Confusion Assessment Method) is a key diagnostic tool for delirium assessment in elderly patients.
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