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Dr. Christine Tomkinson, BSc BMBS Adult Neurology Resident, McMaster University Ontario, Canada Confusion in the Older Adult

Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

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Open education forum presentation by Dr. Christine Tomkinson on care of the older confused adult. Uploaded with permission, free to distribute.

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Page 1: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Dr. Chr is t ine Tomkinson, BSc BMBSAdul t Neuro logy Res ident ,

McMaster Univers i tyOntar io , Canada

Confusion in the Older Adult

Page 2: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

76 yr old woman with confusion…

Focused Medical History Duration? Constant or fluctuating? ROS – fever, malaise, cough,

dysuria, recent trauma

Page 3: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

76 yr old woman with confusion…

Past Medical History Previous similar episodes? Known dementia diagnosis?

If so, what’s different today?

Page 4: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

76 yr old woman with confusion…

Medications List of medications; any recent changes? Who controls meds and how are they given (blister

pack, etc) Any concerns with med administration? Look at meds – more/less than expected?

Page 5: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

76 yr old woman with confusion…

Social History Who lives with her? Recently widowed? Social outlets? Diet, alcohol use

Page 6: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Delirium

Disturbance in consciousness, with reduced ability to focus, sustain, or shift attention

Change in cognition or development of a perceptual disturbance

Disturbance develops over short period of time (hrs to days)

Fluctuates during course of dayCaused by a medical condition, substance

intoxication or medication side effect

Page 7: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Why do we care?

10-15% prevalence in general medical/surgical in patients

Approx 30% of older patients during a hospital stay

60-70% in ICU80-90% palliative care

Increased length of hospital stay, institutional discharge, mortality

Page 8: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Clinical Features

D – Disordered thinkingE – Euphoria, Emotions (fearful, depressed,

angry)L – Language impaired (dysarthia, dysnomia)I – Illusions, delusions, hallucinationsR – Reversal of sleep-wake cyclesI – Inattention/Distractible U – Unaware and disorientedM – Memory deficits

Page 9: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia
Page 10: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Causes of Delirium - DIMS

Drugs New medications, Interactions Overdose/Withdrawal Side effects **Anticholingerics Poisons

Page 11: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Causes of Delirium - DIMS

Infectious/Inflammatory Sepsis Meningitis/Encephalitis UTI/Pneumonia/Cellulitis

Page 12: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Causes of Delirium - DIMS

Metabolic Electrolyte disturbance Hyper/Hypo-glycemia Hypercarbia Hypoxemia Endocrine – Thyroid, Parathyroid, Pituitary, Adrenal Systemic organ failure – Liver/Renal Nutritional – Wernicke’s (Thiamine), B12, Folate

Page 13: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Causes of Delirium - DIMS

Structural Head injury – SAH, SDH Stroke, Seizure Space occupying lesion – Neoplasm, Abscess

Page 14: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Risk Factors

Predisposing Factors Precipitating Factors

Underlying brain diseases (dementias)

Polypharmacy

Advanced age Infection

Sensory impairment Dehydration

Immobility

Malnutrition

Catheter use

Hospitalization/Nursing home

Page 15: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Dementia

Development of multiple cognitive deficits Memory impairment At least one of:

Aphasia Apraxia Agnosia Disturbance in executive function

Gradual onset and progressive decline

Page 16: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Epidemiology

Estimated 35.6 million people worldwide (2010)

Total projected to double every 20 years In Middle East and North African countries, projected

increase of 125%

Wortmann, M., Dementia: a global health priority - highlights from an ADI and World Health Organization report. Alzheimers Res Ther, 2012. 4(5)

Page 17: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Epidemiology

Approx 15% over age 65Incidence doubles every 10 years after 6050% prevalence over age 90Prevalence increased in Down Syndrome and

head injury (AD)

Page 18: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Types of Dementia

Alzheimer’s Disease – 60-80%

STM loss (anterograde amnesia) Loss of visuospatial skills, insight, executive

functioning, apraxia Vascular Dementia (multi-infarct) – 10-20%

Abrupt onset and stepwise deterioration Focal findings/Deficits specific to area affected May have vascular risk factors or stroke history

Mixed

Page 19: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Types of Dementia

Frontotemporal Dementia – 10%

Disinhibition, socially inappropriate Emotional lability Progressive expressive aphasia Memory preserved

Lewy Body Dementia – 15-25%

Fluctuating cognition/attention with progressive decline

Visual hallucinations Parkinsonism

Parkinson’s related Dementia

Page 20: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Reversible Dementia

Normal Pressure hydrocephalusVitamin deficiencies

Wernicke-Korsakoff’s (Thiamine – EtOH) B12, Folate

MedicationsThyroid dysfunctionHypo/Hyper-glycemiaCortisolDepressionHeavy metals

Page 21: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia
Page 22: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

So what should you check?

Collateral history from family memberVital signs

Temperature Glucose SpO2

GEMS Diamond

Page 23: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Management of a Confused Adult

Well-lit, quiet roomGet down to the patient’s levelHearing aids/GlassesReverse stethoscope if neededTalk slowly, clearly and use plain language

Page 24: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

Management of a Confused Adult

Give them time to process questionsOrient and re-orient; use family membersAvoid restraints, catheters, linesStop unnecessary medsTreat underlying causes

Page 25: Confusion in the older adult: delirium and dementia

References

Atia M, Rastin T, and Scott C. Neurology. In: Toronto Notes, 27th Ed, Toronto Notes for Medical Students Inc., Toronto 2011. p.10-15.

VIHA. CAM v3 Delirium in the older person: a medical emergency. www.viha.ca/mhas/resources/delirium/ (Accessed June 30,2014)

Francis J and Young GB. Diagnosis of delirium and confusional states. In: UpToDate, Wilterdink JL (Ed), UpToDate, Waltham, MA. (Accessed June 26, 2014).

Harrington, C.J. and K. Vardi, Delirium: presentation, epidemiology, and diagnostic evaluation (part 1). R I Med J (2013), 2014. 97(6): p. 18-23.

Hake AM and Farlow MR. Clinical features and diagnosis of dementia with Lewy bodies. In: UpToDate, Eichler AF (Ed), UpToDate, Waltham, MA (Accessed July 1, 2014).

Holiff J, White M, and Wilson KR. Psychiatry. In: Toronto Notes, 27th Ed, Toronto Notes for Medical Students Inc, Toronto 2011. p.17-19.

Shadien MF and Larson EB. Risk factors for cognitive decline and dementia. In: UpToDate, Eichler AF (Ed), UpToDate, Waltham, MA (Accessed June 30,2014).

World Health Organization. Dementia: A public health priority. WHO Press, Geneva 2012.

Wortmann, M., Dementia: a global health priority - highlights from an ADI and World Health Organization report. Alzheimers Res Ther, 2012. 4(5): p. 40.

Wright CB. Etiology, clinical manifestations, and diagnosis of vascular dementia. In: UpToDate, Eichler AF (Ed), UpToDate, Waltham, MA (Accessed July 1, 2014).