Aetiology
The aetiology of delirium is usually multifactorial.[35][36] In general, delirium occurs due to a complex interplay of reduced functional reserve (secondary to predisposing factors) and precipitating insults such as infection, metabolic derangements, environmental factors, sleep deprivation, surgery, and/or primary illness.[35][36] This interplay explains why some patients, particularly those with cognitive and functional impairments, become delirious with relatively minor insults such as a UTI while more robust individuals are unaffected.
Predisposing factors
Key predisposing factors or risk factors for delirium include:[35][36]
Older age
Dementia or cognitive impairment[37]
Visual or hearing impairment
Functional impairment or immobility
History of delirium
Decreased oral intake (e.g., dehydration)
Polypharmacy
Co-existing medical illness
Physical frailty
Surgery.
Precipitating insults
Important precipitating insults that can result in delirium include:[35][36]
Drugs: sedatives, narcotics, anticholinergics, multiple drug use, and alcohol, as well as overdose of tricyclic antidepressants, stimulants, opiates, corticosteroids, analgesics, cardiac glycosides, and anti-Parkinson's drugs[38][39][40]
Primary neurological injury: stroke, intracranial bleeding, meningitis
Acute illness: infection (e.g., pneumonia, urinary tract infection, sepsis), cardiac illness (e.g., myocardial infarction), hypoxia, shock, dehydration, fever, constipation, iatrogenic complications
Metabolic abnormalities
Surgery (e.g., orthopaedic, cardiac): duration of cardiopulmonary bypass[41]
Environmental factors: use of physical restraint, use of catheters/invasive monitoring, intensive care unit stay
Pain
Prolonged sleep deprivation[42]
Drug withdrawal: benzodiazepines, alcohol.
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