Delirium in
critical illness: clinical manifestations, outcomes, and management
Joanna L.
Stollings, Katarzyna
Kotfis, Gerald
Chanques, Brenda T. Pun, Pratik P.
Pandharipande &
Intensive
Care Medicine: 16 August 2021
Delirium is the most common manifestation of brain
dysfunction in critically ill patients. In the intensive care unit (ICU),
duration of delirium is independently predictive of excess death, length of
stay, cost of care, and acquired dementia. There are numerous
neurotransmitter/functional and/or injury-causing hypotheses rather than a
unifying mechanism for delirium. Without using a validated delirium instrument,
delirium can be misdiagnosed (under, but also overdiagnosed and trivialized),
supporting the recommendation to use a monitoring instrument routinely. The
best-validated ICU bedside instruments are CAM-ICU and ICDSC, both of which
also detect subsyndromal delirium. Both tools have some inherent limitations in
the neurologically injured patients, yet still provide valuable information
about delirium once the sequelae of the primary injury settle into a new
post-injury baseline. Now it is known that antipsychotics and other
psychoactive medications do not reliably improve brain function in critically ill
delirious patients. ICU teams should systematically screen for predisposing and
precipitating factors. These include exacerbations of cardiac/respiratory
failure or sepsis, metabolic disturbances (hypoglycemia, dysnatremia, uremia
and ammonemia) receipt of psychoactive medications, and sensory deprivation
through prolonged immobilization, uncorrected vision and hearing deficits, poor
sleep hygiene, and isolation from loved ones so common during COVID-19
pandemic. The ABCDEF (A2F) bundle is a means to facilitate implementation of
the 2018 Pain, Agitation/Sedation, Delirium, Immobility, and Sleep Disruption
in Adult Patients in the ICU (PADIS) Guidelines. In over 25,000 patients across
nearly 100 institutions, the A2F bundle has been shown in a dose–response
fashion (i.e., greater bundle compliance) to yield improved survival, length of
stay, coma and delirium duration, cost, and less ICU bounce-backs and discharge
to nursing homes.
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