Abstract

The presentation of common acute diseases in older age is often referred to as “atypical”. Frequently, the symptoms are neither single nor tissue related. In most cases, the onset of symptoms and diseases is the expression of a diminished reserve with a failure of the body system and imbalance of brain function. Delirium is one of the main devastating and prevalent atypical symptoms and could be considered as a geriatric syndrome. It encompasses an array of neuropsychiatric symptoms and represents a disarrangement of the cerebral function in response to one or more stressors. The most recent definition, reported in the DSM-V, depicts delirium as a clear disturbance in attention and awareness. The deficit is to be developed in a relatively short time period (usually hours or days). The attention disorder must be associated with another cognitive impairment in memory, orientation, language, visual-spatial or perception abilities. For the treatment, it is imperative to remove the potential causes of delirium before prescribing drugs. Even a non-pharmacological approach to reducing the precipitating causes should be identified and planned. When we are forced to approach the pharmacological treatment of hyperactive delirium in older persons, we should select highly cost-effective drugs. High attention should be devoted to the correct balance between improvement of psychiatric symptoms and occurrence of side effects. Clinicians should be guided in the correct choice of drugs following cluster symptoms presentation, excluding drugs that could potentially produce complications rather than advantages. In this brief point-of-view, we propose a novel pharmacological flow-chart of treatment in relation to the basic clusters of diseases of an older patient acutely admitted to the hospital and, in particular, we emphasize “What We Should Not Do!”, with the intention of avoiding possible side effects of drugs used.

Highlights

  • The clinical presentation of acute disease is often considered atypical in older persons [1]

  • Delirium is a geriatric syndrome with a significant impact on the health status of older patients

  • It is highly prevalent among hospitalized patients, and its occurrence is associated with a number of negative outcomes and high healthcare costs

Read more

Summary

Diagnostic Framework of Delirium in Older Persons

The clinical presentation of acute disease is often considered atypical in older persons [1]. The list of activities that should be planned for identifying predisposing and precipitating causes, according to the current guidelines [36] (www.sign.ac.uk › sign-157-delirium), includes a package of care for patients at risk of developing delirium: orientation and ensuring patients have their glasses and hearing aids; promoting sleep hygiene; early mobilization; pain control; prevention, early identification, and treatment of postoperative complications; maintaining optimal hydration and nutrition; regulation of bladder and bowel function; and provision of supplementary oxygen, if appropriate. Pharmacological treatment is necessary and should not be avoided, especially for the hyperactive delirium and agitated persons with aggressiveness According to these studies, clinicians could follow the suggestions and automatically choose the best pharmacological treatment based on the cluster symptoms presentation of the patients [41,42,43]. A patient with hyperactive delirium superimposed on dementia and epilepsy could be treated with antiepileptic drugs

No extrapyramidal signs but respiratory and severe hepatic failure
Extrapyramidal signs with respiratory and severe hepatic failure
No extrapyramidal signs with respiratory and severe renal failure
Extrapyramidal signs with respiratory and severe renal failure
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call