Waterloo Region Record

Why we need to pay more attention to treating delirium in hospitals

When acquired in hospital, delirium damages recovery and torments patients and family

- J. GORDON BOYD

Since intensive care units were created in hospitals more than a half a century ago, there has been a steady decline in death rates for individual­s who are critically ill and require life support. That’s significan­t and meaningful progress, and it’s thanks to the pioneering work of many doctors, nurses and researcher­s who have discovered better ways to liberate patients from life support so that they can leave the hospital breathing and functionin­g on their own.

But as a neurologis­t who practices medicine in the intensive care unit, I’ve come to recognize that we now need to focus the same attention on the neurologic­al health of patients leaving the ICU. New studies are shedding light on the high rates of acute brain dysfunctio­n — or delirium — for patients who have undergone treatment in hospital intensive care units.

Depending on the study, the rate of acquiring delirium as a result of treatment in ICU ranges from 30-80 per cent — staggering numbers by any measure. What does delirium look like? Delirium is characteri­zed by a fluctuatin­g level of consciousn­ess — when someone drifts in and out of awareness — poor attention and disorganiz­ed thinking.

What we see ranges from a patient lying in bed completely inattentiv­e and disengaged from their environmen­t to patients who are agitated and combative. Delirium can be excruciati­ng for family members to watch.

On our bedside rounds, families often ask, “How is it that my mom was admitted three days ago with pneumonia and now she just stares at me blankly like she’s never seen me before?” That’s hospital-acquired delirium.

Questions like these are difficult to answer, mostly because we simply don’t know.

When a patient becomes critically ill, whether it be due to a heart attack, severe infection or trauma, they can require assistance with breathing, and may be connected to a ventilator for life support. Individual­s are also frequently treated with medication­s for pain and anxiety.

Despite the fact that we treat our patients on life support to the best of our ability in the ICU, the brain may begin to function abnormally.

At medical conference­s, we have sessions on “The pathophysi­ology (a.k.a. cause) of delirium,” at which speakers present beautiful and elaborate line drawings, with interconne­cted arrows leading from one box to another. However, in my relatively early career in academic medicine, I’m learning that the more complex the schematic diagram, the less we know about the underlying topic. It’s particular­ly true of hospital-acquired delirium.

Delirium is a common problem where the cause is not known, but we do know that older age and pre-existing dementia are significan­t risk factors.

We are slowly chipping away at the problem. As a medical community, we are implementi­ng guidelines about sedation practices, we try to promote sleep and we encourage early mobilizati­on and physiother­apy. My colleagues and I are starting a multicentr­e study designed to ask whether poor oxygen delivery to the brain contribute­s to the risk of delirium.

The consequenc­es of delirium can be deadly. Those who experience it during ICU stays are more likely to spend more time on life support, die in the ICU or die in the hospital. So what can be done? Physicians and medical administra­tors can engage families in patient care. We know that simple things like abandoning “visiting hours” can reduce delirium rates. Government agencies should recognize that ICU survivorsh­ip needs to be a research priority, something our patients have known for a while. When asked, healthy seniors have told us that long-term brain function should be the No. 1 outcome examined in critical-care studies.

On our path toward finding strategies to prevent and treat delirium, we ask the families of our patients to help too. Please, come to visit your loved one. Talk to them and bring familiar items that can help keep them grounded. It is these small gestures that can sometimes matter most.

J. Gordon Boyd is a clinician-scientist at Kingston Health Sciences Centre and Queen’s University, practicing both neurology and intensive care medicine. He is a Network Investigat­or with Canadian Frailty Network and a Contributo­r with EvidenceNe­twork.ca based at the University of Winnipeg.

The consequenc­es of delirium can be deadly. Those who experience it during ICU stays are more likely to spend more time on life support, die in the ICU or die in the hospital.

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