Delirium: Acute Confusional State

Definition:

Delirium is an acute, fluctuating disturbance in attention, awareness, and cognition that develops over hours to days. It represents a medical emergency requiring immediate evaluation.

Key Diagnostic Criteria (DSM-5):

  1. Disturbed attention (reduced ability to focus/sustain/shift attention)
  2. Acute onset (hours to days) with daily fluctuations
  3. Additional cognitive disturbance (memory, orientation, language, visuospatial)
  4. Not better explained by pre-existing neurocognitive disorder
  5. Evidence of underlying medical cause, intoxication, or medication effect

Clinical Features:

DomainManifestations
AttentionEasily distracted, unable to follow conversations
ConsciousnessReduced awareness of environment
CognitionDisorientation, memory deficits, incoherent speech
PerceptionHallucinations (often visual), illusions
PsychomotorHyperactive (agitated) or hypoactive (lethargic) subtypes
Sleep-WakeReversed cycle, daytime drowsiness

Subtypes:

  1. Hyperactive Delirium (15-25%)
    • Agitation, hallucinations, combativeness
    • More easily recognized
  2. Hypoactive Delirium (50-75%)
    • Lethargy, decreased responsiveness
    • Often missed (“quiet confusion”)
  3. Mixed Type (50%)
    • Fluctuates between hyper/hypoactive states

Common Causes (I WATCH DEATH Mnemonic):

I – Infection (UTI, pneumonia, sepsis)
W – Withdrawal (alcohol, benzodiazepines)
A – Acute metabolic (electrolytes, glucose, liver/renal failure)
T – Trauma (head injury, post-op)
C – CNS pathology (stroke, seizures, meningitis)
H – Hypoxia (COPD, heart failure, anemia)
D – Deficiencies (B12, thiamine)
E – Endocrine (thyroid, adrenal)
A – Acute vascular (shock, MI)
T – Toxins/drugs (anticholinergics, opioids, polypharmacy)
H – Heavy metals

Risk Factors:

  • Patient Factors: Older age, dementia, multiple comorbidities
  • Hospital Factors: ICU admission, physical restraints, bladder catheters
  • Medications: Opioids, benzodiazepines, anticholinergics

Assessment Tools:

  1. Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) – Gold standard
    • Acute onset + fluctuating course
    • Inattention
    • Disorganized thinking
    • Altered consciousness
  2. 4AT Rapid Assessment (≥4 suggests delirium)
    • Alertness, AMT4, attention, acute change
  3. Delirium Rating Scale (DRS-R-98) – Severity measure

Management:

1. Identify/Treat Underlying Cause

  • Review medications (STOP anticholinergics/sedatives)
  • Treat infections, correct metabolic derangements

2. Non-Pharmacologic Measures:

  • Reorientation (clocks, calendars, family presence)
  • Ensure adequate sleep (reduce nighttime interruptions)
  • Early mobilization
  • Sensory aids (glasses, hearing devices)
  • Avoid physical restraints

3. Pharmacologic Therapy (LAST RESORT):

  • 1st Line: Haloperidol (0.5-1mg PO/IM/IV)
  • Alternatives: Atypical antipsychotics (risperidone, quetiapine)
  • Contraindicated: Benzodiazepines (except alcohol/benzo withdrawal)

Complications:

  • Increased mortality (up to 25% in hospitalized patients)
  • Prolonged hospitalization
  • Higher risk of dementia
  • Functional decline

Prevention Strategies:

  • Hospital Elder Life Program (HELP):
    • Orientation
    • Early mobilization
    • Hearing/vision adaptations
    • Sleep hygiene
    • Volume/nutrition repletion

Prognosis:

  • Typically resolves within days-weeks with treatment
  • 30-40% may have symptoms persisting months
  • Hypoactive delirium has worse outcomes

Differential Diagnosis:

  • Dementia (chronic, no fluctuation)
  • Depression (“pseudodelirium” with psychomotor slowing)
  • Psychosis (no acute medical cause)