Delirium could accelerate dementia-related mental decline
University College London New Jan 30, 2017
When hospitalised, people can become acutely confused and disorientated. This condition, known as delirium, affects a quarter of older patients and new research by UCL and University of Cambridge shows it may have long–lasting consequences, including accelerating the dementia process.
The study, published in the journal JAMA Psychiatry, is the first to show the multiplying effects of delirium and dementia in these patients.
Episodes of delirium in people who are not known to have dementia, might also reveal dementia at its earliest stages, the research found.
While both delirium and dementia are important factors in cognitive decline among the elderly, delirium is preventable and treatable through dedicated geriatric care.
Further research is needed to understand exactly how delirium interacts with dementia, and how this could be blocked.
ÂIf delirium is causing brain injury in the short and long–term, then we must increase our efforts to diagnose, prevent and treat delirium. Ultimately, targeting delirium could be a chance to delay or reduce dementia said Dr. Daniel Davis (MRC Unit for Lifelong Health and Ageing at UCL), who led the research while at the University of Cambridge.
Scientists looked at three European populations – in Finland, Cambridge and UK–wide  and examined brain specimens in 987 people aged 65 and older. Each personÂs memory, thinking and experience of delirium had been recorded over 10 years towards the end of their life.
When these were linked with pathology abnormalities due to AlzheimerÂs and other dementias, those with both delirium and dementia–changes had the most severe change in memory.
Dr Davis added: ÂUnfortunately, most delirium goes unrecognised. In busy hospitals, a sudden change in confusion not be noticed by hospital staff. Patients can be transferred several times and staff often switch over – it requires everyone to Âthink delirium and identify that a patientÂs brain function has changed.Â
Go to Original
The study, published in the journal JAMA Psychiatry, is the first to show the multiplying effects of delirium and dementia in these patients.
Episodes of delirium in people who are not known to have dementia, might also reveal dementia at its earliest stages, the research found.
While both delirium and dementia are important factors in cognitive decline among the elderly, delirium is preventable and treatable through dedicated geriatric care.
Further research is needed to understand exactly how delirium interacts with dementia, and how this could be blocked.
ÂIf delirium is causing brain injury in the short and long–term, then we must increase our efforts to diagnose, prevent and treat delirium. Ultimately, targeting delirium could be a chance to delay or reduce dementia said Dr. Daniel Davis (MRC Unit for Lifelong Health and Ageing at UCL), who led the research while at the University of Cambridge.
Scientists looked at three European populations – in Finland, Cambridge and UK–wide  and examined brain specimens in 987 people aged 65 and older. Each personÂs memory, thinking and experience of delirium had been recorded over 10 years towards the end of their life.
When these were linked with pathology abnormalities due to AlzheimerÂs and other dementias, those with both delirium and dementia–changes had the most severe change in memory.
Dr Davis added: ÂUnfortunately, most delirium goes unrecognised. In busy hospitals, a sudden change in confusion not be noticed by hospital staff. Patients can be transferred several times and staff often switch over – it requires everyone to Âthink delirium and identify that a patientÂs brain function has changed.Â
Only Doctors with an M3 India account can read this article. Sign up for free or login with your existing account.
4 reasons why Doctors love M3 India
-
Exclusive Write-ups & Webinars by KOLs
-
Daily Quiz by specialty
-
Paid Market Research Surveys
-
Case discussions, News & Journals' summaries