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Query: UMLS:C0011206 (
delirium
)
5,996
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Older adults in non-psychiatric acute and long-term care settings need to be screened routinely for cognitive function and mental status by clinicians and health care providers. Screening instruments increasingly are being used in order to evaluate programs, implement clinical decisions and conduct research. The purpose, scope and depth of needed assessment guides the selection of the screening instrument. This article critically reviews 11 screening instruments used to assess cognitive function and mental status in older adults: Dementia of the Alzheimer Type Inventory, Brief Cognitive Rating Scale, Blessed Dementia Scale, Cognitive Capacity Screening Examination, Cognitive Levels Scale, FROMAJE, Global Deterioration Scale, Mini-Mental State Exam, Clinical Dementia Rating, Mental Status Questionnaire and the Short Portable Mental Status Questionnaire. Since cognitive impairment is a broad construct, the descriptors used to search the literature were the following: age-associated memory impairment, acute confusional states, Alzheimer's disease, cognition, confusion,
delirium
, dementia, mental status, multi-infarct dementia, Pick's disease, primary degenerative dementia, pseudodementia and senile dementia of the Alzheimer's type. The Brief Cognitive Rating Scale and the Dementia of the Alzheimer Type Inventory are the only two instruments capable of distinguishing Alzheimer's from other dementias, and the
CDR
is the only instrument that assesses hobbies.
...
PMID:A review of screening instruments for assessing cognition and mental status in older adults. 225 23
Postoperative
delirium
and abnormal behavior were studied in 160 patients aged 60 and over with relation to their QOL assessed before surgical operation. QOL was assessed physically, psychologically, mentally and socially. Physical status was assessed with ability in daily life, seeing, hearing and severity of disease. Psychological condition (depression) was assessed by using GDS (Geriatric Depression Scale of Sheikh), Mentality (dementia) was assessed by using
CDR
(Clinical Dementia Rating) and HDS-R (Revised version of Hasegawa's dementia Scale). Sociality was assessed by social life and familial environment. Postoperatively 37.1% of males and 28.9% of females developed
delirium
and abnormal behaviour. Abnormal behaviour of demented patients was not defined as due to
delirium
or as dementia itself, so it was included in the classification "delirium and abnormal behaviour" because of the same aspect in terms of practical nursing care. The following factors were found to be statistically related to the occurrence of postoperative
delirium
and abnormal behaviour: disability in daily life, dementia, disturbance of hearing. Scores of HDS-R was closely related with the possibility of postoperative
delirium
and abnormal behaviour.
...
PMID:[Postoperative delirium and abnormal behaviour related with preoperative quality of life in elderly patients]. 796 49
Long-term cognitive impairment is common in survivors of critical illness. Little is known about the etiology of this serious complication. We sought to summarize current scientific knowledge about potentially modifiable risk factors during intensive care unit (ICU) treatment that may play a substantial role in the development of long-term cognitive impairment. All searches were run on October 1, 2017. The search strategy included Ovid MEDLINE, Ovid Embase, Ovid
CDR
, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials and Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effect, Scopus, and Web of Science, and included MeSH headings and keywords related to intensive care, critical care, and cognitive disorders. Searches were restricted to adult subjects. Inclusion required follow-up cognitive evaluation at least 2 months after ICU discharge. Studies assessing patients with cardiac arrest, traumatic brain injury, and cardiac surgery history were excluded. The search strategy resulted in 3180 studies. Of these, 28 studies (.88%) met our inclusion criteria and were analyzed.
Delirium
and duration of
delirium
were associated with long-term cognitive impairment after ICU admission in 6 of 9 studies in which this factor was analyzed. Weaker and more inconsistent associations have been reported with hypoglycemia, hyperglycemia, fluctuations in serum glucose levels, and in-hospital acute stress symptoms. Instead, most of the studies did not find significant associations between long-term cognitive impairment and mechanical ventilation; use of sedatives, vasopressors, or analgesic medications; enteral feeding; hypoxia; extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; systolic blood pressure; pulse rate; or length of ICU stay. Prolonged
delirium
may be a risk factor for long-term cognitive impairment after critical illness, though this association has not been entirely consistent across studies. Other potentially preventable factors have not been shown to have strong or consistent associations with long-term cognitive dysfunction in survivors of critical illness.
...
PMID:Potentially Modifiable Risk Factors for Long-Term Cognitive Impairment After Critical Illness: A Systematic Review. 2930 23
Post-operative
delirium
(POD) is the most common complication following major surgery in non-demented older (>65 y/o) patients. Patients experiencing POD show increased risk for future cognitive decline, including mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer's disease (AD) and, conversely, patients with cognitive decline at surgery show increased risk for POD. Here, we demonstrate that a previously established panel of AD-driven MCI (ADMCI) autoantibody (aAB) biomarkers can be used to detect prodromal AD pre-surgically in individuals admitted into the hospital for hip fracture repair (HFR) surgery. Plasma from 39 STRIDE (STRIDE: A Strategy to Reduce the Incidence of Postoperative
Delirium
in Elderly Patients) HFR patients and sera from 25 age- and sex-matched non-demented and non-surgical controls were screened using human protein microarrays to measure expression of a panel of 44 previously identified MCI aAB biomarkers. The predictive classification accuracy of the aAB biomarker panel was evaluated using Random Forest (RF). The ADMCI aAB biomarkers successfully distinguished 21 STRIDE HFR patients (
CDR
= 0.5) from 25 matched non-surgical controls with an overall accuracy of 91.3% (sensitivity = 95.2%; specificity = 88.0%). The ADMCI aAB panel also correctly identified six patients with preoperative
CDR
= 0 who later converted to
CDR
= 0.5 or >1 at one-year follow-up. Lastly, the majority of cognitively normal (
CDR
= 0) STRIDE HFR subjects that were positive for CSF AD biomarkers based on the A/T/N classification system were likewise classified as ADMCI aAB-positive using the biomarker panel. Results suggest that pre-surgical detection of ADMCI aAB biomarkers can readily identify HFR patients with likely early-stage AD pathology using pre-surgery blood samples, opening up the potential for early, blood-based AD detection and improvements in peri- and postoperative patient management.
...
PMID:Detection of early-stage Alzheimer's pathology using blood-based autoantibody biomarkers in elderly hip fracture repair patients. 3173 Jun 24