Delirium â Comprehensive Medical Guide
Overview
Delirium is an acute, often fluctuating disturbance of attention, awareness, and cognition that develops over a short period (usually hours to days). It is not a disease itself but a clinical syndrome that signals an underlying medical problem, such as infection, medication toxicity, or metabolic imbalance.
Who it affects: While delirium can occur at any age, it is most common in older adults, especially those who are hospitalized, living in longâterm care facilities, or undergoing major surgery. Up to 30â40âŻ% of patients over 65 years old experience delirium during a hospital stay, and the prevalence can rise to 60â80âŻ% in intensiveâcare units (ICU)âŻ[1][2].
Delirium is a medical emergency because it can worsen outcomes, increase mortality, and lead to longâterm cognitive decline.
Symptoms
Delirium presents with a wide variety of signs. The core features are:
- Disturbed attention: Inability to focus, shift, or sustain attention; easily distracted.
- Altered level of consciousness: From hyperalert (agitation) to drowsy or stuporous.
- Disorganized thinking: Illogical or incoherent speech, rambling, or âword salad.â
- Cognitive impairment: Memory deficits, especially for recent events; disorientation to time, place, or person.
Additional symptoms may fluctuate throughout the day and include:
Hyperactive delirium
- Agitation, restlessness, or combativeness
- Hallucinations (often visual) and paranoid ideas
- Rapid speech, pressured or disorganized thoughts
Hypoactive delirium
- Somnolence, lethargy, or seeming âin a fogâ
- Reduced speech, slow movements, apathy
- Often missed because it looks like depression or fatigue
Mixed delirium
- Features of both hyperâ and hypoactive types that alternate
Other possible manifestations:
- Sleepâwake cycle disturbances (e.g., frequent napping, nighttime agitation)
- Emotional lability â sudden crying or laughing
- Motor disturbances â tremor, fidgeting, or decreased movement
Causes and Risk Factors
Delirium is usually multifactorial. The âtwoâhitâ model suggests that a vulnerable brain (predisposing factor) is tipped over by an acute insult (precipitating factor).
Common precipitating causes
- Infections: Urinary tract infection, pneumonia, sepsis
- Metabolic/electrolyte disturbances: Hyperâ or hyponatremia, hypoglycemia, hypercalcemia
- Medications: Anticholinergics, benzodiazepines, opioids, steroids, antihistamines
- Substance withdrawal: Alcohol, benzodiazepines
- Organ failure: Hepatic encephalopathy, renal failure, respiratory failure
- Surgery & anesthesia: Especially cardiac, orthopedic, or major abdominal procedures
- Environmental factors: Sleep deprivation, sensory overload or deprivation, unfamiliar surroundings
Predisposing risk factors (who is most vulnerable)
- Advanced age (â„65 years); risk rises sharply after 80âŻyears
- Preâexisting cognitive impairment or dementia (up to 50âŻ% of delirium cases)âŻ[3]
- Severe chronic illness (e.g., heart failure, COPD, cancer)
- Functional impairment or frailty
- Visual or hearing loss
- Dehydration or malnutrition
- History of prior delirium
Diagnosis
Delirium is a clinical diagnosis. Early recognition is essential.
Screening tools
- Confusion Assessment Method (CAM): Most widely used; evaluates acute onset, inattention, disorganized thinking, and altered consciousness.
- 4AT: Quick (under 2âŻminutes) tool for hospital settings.
- Delirium Rating ScaleâRâ98 (DRSâRâ98): Provides severity scoring.
Clinical evaluation
- History: Time course, recent illnesses, medication changes, substance use, baseline cognition.
- Physical exam: Vital signs, neurologic assessment, signs of infection, dehydration, pain.
- Laboratory & imaging studies:
- Basic metabolic panel, CBC, liver function tests, thyroid panel, serum ammonia
- Urinalysis and cultures if infection suspected
- Chest Xâray or CT scan for pneumonia, pulmonary embolism, etc.
- Head CT or MRI if focal neurologic signs or trauma are present
Importantly, no single test âprovesâ delirium; the diagnosis rests on the combination of mental status changes and identification of an underlying cause.
Treatment Options
Treating delirium involves two parallel tracks: (1) managing the underlying cause(s) and (2) addressing the neuropsychiatric symptoms.
Addressing the underlying cause
- Prompt treatment of infections with appropriate antibiotics
- Correction of metabolic abnormalities (e.g., electrolyte replacement)
- Review and discontinue nonâessential highârisk medications
- Ensuring adequate oxygenation, hydration, and nutrition
- Managing pain adequately (often with nonâopioid analgesics when possible)
Symptomâtargeted therapies
- Nonâpharmacologic measures (first line):
- Reâorientation aids â clocks, calendars, familiar objects
- Sleepâpromotion: dim lights at night, minimize noise, limit daytime naps
- Early mobilization and physical therapy
- Optimize sensory input â ensure glasses/hearing aids are used
- Family involvement for reassurance and realityâorientation
- Pharmacologic options (reserved for severe agitation or psychosis that threatens safety):
- Haloperidol â classic antipsychotic; start 0.5â1âŻmg PO/IV, titrate up to 5âŻmg as needed.
- Olanzapine or quetiapine â atypical antipsychotics with lower extrapyramidal risk; useful in patients with Parkinsonism.
- Consider dexmedetomidine infusion for ICU delirium when agitation hampers ventilation.
- Avoid benzodiazepines except for alcohol or benzodiazepine withdrawal.
Medications should be used at the lowest effective dose for the shortest duration, with regular reassessment.
Supportive care
- Fluid and electrolyte balance
- Nutritional support (highâprotein diet, oral supplements)
- Oxygen therapy if hypoxic
- Early removal of invasive devices (catheters, lines) when safe
Living with Delirium
While delirium itself is usually shortâterm, many patients experience lingering cognitive or functional deficits. The following strategies help patients, families, and caregivers navigate recovery.
Postâdischarge planning
- Schedule a followâup appointment within 1â2âŻweeks to reassess cognition.
- Conduct a medication review with a pharmacist to eliminate unnecessary drugs.
- Arrange home health services for wound care, medication administration, or physical therapy if needed.
Home environment adjustments
- Keep the living space wellâlit, clutterâfree, and equipped with clocks and calendars.
- Maintain regular sleepâwake routines â same bedtime, limited daytime napping.
- Provide hearing aids and eyeglasses, and check that batteries are functional.
- Use simple, written instructions or picture boards for medication and daily tasks.
Family & caregiver tips
- Speak slowly, use short sentences, and repeat information calmly.
- Avoid arguing; instead, validate feelings and gently redirect.
- Encourage participation in light activities (folding towels, short walks) to promote orientation.
- Monitor for signs of relapse, such as new confusion, fever, or changes in behavior.
Prevention
Because delirium often signals an underlying medical issue, many preventive measures focus on maintaining physiologic stability and minimizing iatrogenic stressors.
Hospitalâbased bundles
- Screen highârisk patients on admission using CAM or 4AT.
- Optimize sensory input: Provide glasses/hearing aids, reduce unnecessary alarms.
- Promote sleep hygiene: Nonâpharmacologic sleep protocols, avoid nighttime disturbances.
- Early mobilization: Sit up, stand, and walk as soon as clinically feasible.
- Hydration & nutrition: Offer regular fluids and proteinârich meals.
- Medication stewardship: Review orders daily; avoid anticholinergics and highâdose opioids when possible.
Community and home strategies
- Stay up to date on vaccinations (influenza, pneumonia, COVIDâ19) to reduce infection risk.
- Manage chronic conditions (diabetes, hypertension) aggressively.
- Limit alcohol and avoid nonâprescribed psychoactive substances.
- Encourage regular physical activity and cognitive exercises (reading, puzzles).
Complications
- Increased mortality: Delirium doubles the odds of inâhospital death, especially in ICU patientsâŻ[2].
- Prolonged hospital stay: Average length of stay can increase by 2â3âŻdays.
- Functional decline: Up to 40âŻ% of older adults fail to regain baseline independence.
- Longâterm cognitive impairment: Higher risk of developing dementia; some studies show a 2âfold increase within 5âŻyearsâŻ[3].
- Falls and injuries: Disorientation and motor agitation raise fall risk.
- Psychiatric sequelae: Postâdelirium depression or anxiety is common.
When to Seek Emergency Care
- Sudden, severe confusion that develops within minutes to hours.
- Fluctuating consciousness with periods of stupor or inability to awaken.
- Signs of a medical emergency â high fever (>38.5âŻÂ°C / 101.3âŻÂ°F), severe shortness of breath, chest pain, uncontrolled bleeding, or seizures.
- New onset of hallucinations or violent/aggressive behavior that threatens self or others.
- Sudden weakness, slurred speech, or facial droop (possible stroke).
- Any rapid deterioration in mental status in a person with known dementia or recent surgery.
References:
- Mayo Clinic. âDelirium.â Updated 2023. https://www.mayoclinic.org
- American Geriatrics Society. âDelirium in Older Adults.â Clinical Practice Guideline, 2022.
- Cleveland Clinic. âDelirium: Symptoms, Causes, and Treatments.â 2024. https://my.clevelandclinic.org
- World Health Organization. âPrevention of Delirium in Hospitalized Older Persons.â WHO Guidelines, 2021.
- National Institute on Aging, NIH. âDelirium.â 2022. https://www.nia.nih.gov