Delirium – Consider prolonged/persistent delirium
Prolonged delirium can be due to new insults
A patient with prolonged delirium should be reassessed to ensure there are not new precipitating factors that are perpetuating.
- Examples include new constipation, urinary retention, pain (especially post operative), infections
Alternatively, prolonged/persistent delirium (especially >4 weeks) can occur in a subset (Nature – Outcomes) and is associated with worse mortality, need for institutionalization, and cognitive/functional outcomes
- Persistent delirium may occur in up to 20% of patients at 6 months!
- Longer duration of delirium is associated with worse global cognition and executive function at 3 and 12 months
- Persistent delirium is associated with higher rates of mortality and institutionalization with worse physical and cognitive function (meta-analysis and systematic review)
- In practice, these patients rarely – if ever– return to their premorbid baseline