Delirium & Violence Risk Flashcards

1
Q

Delirium - (pharm) Tx?

A

Antipsychotics
• Typical—haloperidol, atypical– quetiapine, olanzapine, and risperidone
• Low doses, short term use to minimize side effects

Benzodiazepines
• More sedating, may be helpful in very agitated patient
• Can increase confusion in elderly, respiratory depression an issue

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2
Q

Delirium - 4 core features?

A

Disturbance of consciousness
Cognitive and perceptual disturbances
Sudden onset over hours to days
Direct physiological causes identified

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3
Q

Delirium - key NT abnormalities?

A

↑ dopamine

↓acetylcholine

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4
Q

Delirium - workup?

A
  • Laboratory studies for metabolic derangement, drug toxicity, and to rule out sepsis
  • CT head
  • EEG
  • Brain MRI in selected cases
  • CSF in suspected CNS infection
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5
Q

Most common cause of Delirium in elderly?

A

Polypharmacy

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6
Q

Altered consciousness can result from a lesion or dysfunction of what parts of the CNS?

A

– Bilateral cerebral hemisphere
– Bilateral thalamus
– Brainstem

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7
Q

Normal Consciousness depends on what 2 things?

A

– Intact cerebral hemispheres for cognition

– Reticular formation for alertness

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8
Q

3 big high-risk meds that may cause Delirium?

A

– Anti-cholinergics-OTC
– Opioids
– Benzodiazepines
(though many others)

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