The Prevention, Assessment and Management of Delirium - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 30
About This Presentation
Title:

The Prevention, Assessment and Management of Delirium

Description:

You are called as a patient is becoming agitated, what would you do ? ... Patient labelled 'poor historian' or 'acopic' Sleeping with mouth open ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:715
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: royal99
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Prevention, Assessment and Management of Delirium


1
The Prevention, Assessment and Management of
Delirium Dr Nicholas Waldron Advanced Geriatric
Trainee
2
First Questions to start
  • What drug is first line if required to treat
    delirium
  • 1. Risperidone
  • 2. Lorazepam
  • 3. Diazepam
  • 4. Haloperidol
  • 5. Olanzepine

3
Second Question
  • What oral dose would you use ?
  • 1. 0.25mg
  • 2. 0.5mg
  • 3. 1mg
  • 4. 5mg
  • 5. 10mg

4
Last Question
  • You are called as a patient is becoming agitated,
    what would you do ?
  • 1. Ask nurse to manage nonpharmacologically and
    contact if ongoing problem
  • 2. Administer Haloperidol on phone order
  • 3. Assess patient medically
  • 4. Recommend call psych services
  • 5. Call on-call medical registrar

5
  • Overview of Delirium
  • Prevention
  • Assessment
  • Management

6
Why delirium
  • Few ill health situations are more degrading to
    people of any age than loss of reasoning,
    faculties, and personhood. These are the
    unpleasant consequences of delirium a common
    condition affecting ill older people,
    particularly those with some degree of dementia.
  • Young and Inouye, BMJ, 2007

7
Delirium is common
  • Arrive at hospital with delirium (prevalent)
    10-15
  • Develop during hospital stay (incident) 5-40

8
Importance
  • Increased length of stay, increased mortality and
    increased risk of institutional placement
  • Hospital mortality rates of patients with
    delirium range from 6 to 18

9
Under-recognised and Misdiagnosed
  • RPH, 30 incidence, 50 recognised (CAM day)
  • 0.11 delirium recorded as Primary diagnosis 2006
  • Fremantle 11 incidence, 35 recogntion rate
    (notes audit)
  • hypoactive are overlooked
  • misdiagnosed as depression
  • lack of awareness or understanding of health and
    ageing

10
PREVENTION
  • Excellent nursing care is the cornerstone.
  • Addressing Modifiable risk factors.
  • 1)Cognitive impairment
  • 2) Sleep deprivation
  • 3) Immobilisation
  • 4) Vision impairment
  • 5) Hearing impairment
  • 6) Dehydration

11
(No Transcript)
12
ASSESSMENT
  • Screening Identify people at risk and improve
    recognition
  • Diagnosis CAM method
  • Finding the cause with medical and medication
    review often multifactorial

13
Assessment - Clinical Moments
  • You feel frustration assessing your patient
  • Patient labelled poor historian or acopic
  • Sleeping with mouth open
  • Nursing staff note confusion or report agitation
  • Altered sleep wake cycle
  • Overnight - prescribed haloperidol by telephone
    order
  • Cant be discharged due to functional decline,
    referring for ACAT for high level cares
  • AMTS lt 8, MMSE lt24

14
Diagnosis requires
  • Knowing patients baseline cognitive function
  • Appreciating fluctuations
  • Appreciating what is happening at night
  • Recognising the behaviours above as likely
    representing delirium

15
Confusion Assessment Method
  • The CAM was specifically designed for use with
    the hospitalised older person, to improve
    delirium identification and recognition
  • sensitivity and specificity varies, 70 -100 and
    84 -100
  • Delirium is the default diagnosis

16
Using the CAM
  • Formal cognitive testing
  • Collateral history

17
Diagnosis of Delirium
  • Acute onset and fluctuating
  • Disturbance in attention
  • Altered consciousness
  • Disordered thinking
  • diffuse process

18
Other Features
  • DISORIENTATION
  • MEMORY IMPAIRMENT
  • PERCEPTUAL DISTURBANCE - hallucinations,
    misinterpretations
  • DECREASED MOTOR ACTIVITY - sluggishness, staring
    into space..
  • INCREASED MOTOR ACTIVITY - restlessness, picking
    at bedclothes
  • ALTERED SLEEP WAKE CYCLE

19
Differential
  • Delirium
  • Acute onset
  • Inattention
  • Consciousness
  • Speech
  • Dementia
  • Insidious
  • Memory loss
  • Cognitive deficits

20
What causes Delirium
21
Finding the cause
  • Medical review History, Examination,
    Investigations
  • Medications review occult use

22
Examination
  • Vitals
  • Infection
  • Neurology
  • Bladder scan
  • PR

23
Investigations
  • Full blood count
  • C Reactive Protein
  • Urea and electrolytes
  • Calcium
  • Liver function tests
  • Glucose
  • Blood cultures
  • Chest X-ray
  • ECG
  • Dipstick (if abnormal) /- MSU

24
MANAGEMENT
  • Treating the causes The cornerstone of
    management
  • Support and Prevent complications
  • Managing symptoms with Non pharmacological
    measures
  • Consider whether drug therapy is indicated

25
Non- Pharm Treatment Strategies
  • Patient oriented
  • Trained support person
  • validation and reality orientation strategies
  • family visits
  • Regular staff
  • Utilising Interpreters
  • Regular analgesia
  • Discourage daytime sleeping
  • Manage constipation.
  • External factors
  • Reduce or eliminate restraints
  • Reduce invasive equipment (IV lines, IDC etc)
  • Avoid anticholinergic drugs
  • Eliminate extraneous noise (e.g. pump alarms).
  • Schedule treatments and observations

26
Environment
  • Lighting appropriate to time of day
  • Provision of single room where possible
  • Quiet environment especially at rest times
  • Provision of clock and calendar that clients can
    see
  • Encourage family and carer involvement
  • Avoid room changes where possible

27
Pharmacology Guide
  • INDICATIONS
  • In order to carry out essential investigations or
    treatment
  • To prevent patient endangering themselves or
    others
  • To relieve distress in a highly agitated or
    hallucinating patient

28
(No Transcript)
29
Practice points
  • Aim to use one drug, least invasive
    administration
  • Keep doses to a minimum, increment 2 hourly
  • Use antipsychotic First Line
  • Avoid escalating doses
  • Seek advice
  • Review prescription every 24hours

30
The Future of Aged Care
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com