Abstract

Acute kidney injury (AKI) and delirium are common complications on the intensive care unit (ICU). Few is known about the association of AKI and delirium, as well as about incidence and predictors of delirium in patients with AKI. In this retrospective study, all patients with AKI, as defined by the KDIGO (kidney disease improving global outcome) guideline, treated for more than 24 h on the ICU in an university hospital in 2019 were included and analyzed. Delirium was defined by a NuDesc (Nursing Delirium screening scale) ≥ 2, which is evaluated three times a day in every patient on our ICU as part of daily routine. A total of 383/919 (41.7%) patients developed an AKI during the ICU stay. Delirium was detected in 230/383 (60.1%) patients with AKI. Independent predictors of delirium were: age, psychiatric disease, alcohol abuse, mechanical ventilation, severe shock, and AKI stage II/III (all p < 0.05). The primary cause of illness had no influence on the onset of delirium. Among patients with AKI, the duration of the ICU stay correlated with higher stages of AKI and the presence of delirium (stage I/no delirium: median 1.9 (interquartile range (25th–75th) 1.3–2.9) days; stage II/III/no delirium: 2.6 (1.6–5.5) days; stage I/delirium: 4.1 (2.5–14.3) days; stage II/III/delirium: 6.8 (3.5–11.9) days; all p < 0.01). Delirium, defined as NuDesc ≥ 2 is frequent in patients with AKI on an ICU and independently predicted by higher stages of AKI.

Highlights

  • Acute kidney injury (AKI) and delirium are common complications on the intensive care unit (ICU)

  • While epidemiologic data suggests an association between chronic kidney disease (CKD) and development of neuropsychiatric disease, less is known for the association of acute kidney injury (AKI) and ­delirium[6]

  • This is in concordance with the incidence of delirium reported in other ICU cohorts, ranging from 22 to 83% depending on assessment methods and ­population[14,15,23,24]

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Summary

Introduction

Acute kidney injury (AKI) and delirium are common complications on the intensive care unit (ICU). Few is known about the association of AKI and delirium, as well as about incidence and predictors of delirium in patients with AKI In this retrospective study, all patients with AKI, as defined by the KDIGO (kidney disease improving global outcome) guideline, treated for more than 24 h on the ICU in an university hospital in 2019 were included and analyzed. Studies on delirium report a high incidence of delirium in specific subgroups, including critically ill patients on intensive care units (ICU), in elderly patients, or those with psychiatric d­ iseases[5]. No study exists differentiating the association of delirium and the AKI stage Defining this patients cohort might be of special interest, since incidence and predictors of delirium differ significantly in various patient collectives hampering ­generalization[13,14,15]

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