(Press-News.org) UC San Francisco  researchers have developed a two-minute assessment tool to help hospital staff predict  a patient’s risk of delirium, a change in mental cognition characterized by severe  confusion and disorientation that can prolong hospital stays.
The condition, which occurs in as many as one in five hospitalized patients, tends to develop rapidly and can lead to higher death rates and increased health care costs.      
The new tool is  designed to be simple, efficient and accurate in helping to assess and treat  patients at risk of developing delirium, the scientists said. The tool also can  be used to identify patients who might be most suitable for new targeted interventions  to prevent delirium, the authors reported.
The study will be  published online August 7, 2013 in the Journal of Hospital Medicine.
“It’s estimated that  up to one third of hospital-acquired delirium cases could be prevented with  appropriate interventions, but those interventions are resource-intense and  can’t be applied to everyone,” said lead author Vanja C. Douglas, MD, an  assistant professor of clinical neurology in the UCSF Department of Neurology  and holder of the Sara & Evan Williams Foundation Endowed Neurohospitalist  Chair. 
“Our objective was to  develop a tool to predict delirium using elements that could be assessed  quickly in the fast-paced environment of a hospital,” Douglas said. “The new  tool can be completed by a nurse in two minutes, and provides a clinically  useful and practical alternative to existing delirium prediction models.”  
Delirium, an often  serious disturbance in a patient’s mental abilities, results in confused  thinking and decreased awareness of one’s environment. The precise sequence of  events that take place in the body and brain which results in delirium is not  well understood, the researchers noted. It is believed that the combination of  an aging brain and acute illness creates an imbalance of neurotransmitters that  leads to the confusion and disorientation of delirium. Adding powerful medications  like narcotics to the mix can compound the problem.
Established risk  factors for delirium include:
	
	Older  age;
	Preexisting  cognitive dysfunction;
	Dehydration;
	Severe  illness;
	Vision  and hearing impairment;
	Electrolyte  abnormalities;
	Overmedication.
	
	
In the new UCSF study, some 374 patients took part  -- each was older than 50 and not delirious when admitted to the hospital. The  patients were predominately white and lived at home.
The research was conducted during 2010 and 2011 at  UCSF and the San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
On admission, the patients underwent a structured  interview involving questions related to their baseline cognitive function, residence,  type of pain, visual and hearing abilities, among other factors. Each patient’s  nurses rated them on a scale from “not ill” to near the point of death. 
All the patients were assessed for changes in  cognition for six days or until they were discharged. 
The scientists devised a tool they termed “AWOL,” a  mnemonic standing for age (A); unable to spell “world” backward (W); not fully  oriented to place (O); and moderate to severe illness severity (L).
The researchers found that subjects with higher AWOL  scores were more likely to become disoriented and develop delirium. They also  found that conversely, those with low AWOL scores were at relatively low risk  of developing delirium, meaning that the AWOL tool could stratify patients into  high- and low-risk groups. 
Once identified, patients at greater risk of  delirium should be triaged to an inpatient unit specializing in delirium  prevention, the researchers said.
The authors noted some study limitations:  non-English speaking patients were excluded for logistical reasons as well as  patients with profound aphasia or those in alcohol withdrawal when admitted. 
The authors also pointed out that prior research on  delirium has focused on patients over age 70 since old age is a known risk  factor. But for their study, the authors said they included patients aged 50 or  older “because hospital-acquired delirium still occurs in this age group.”  Indeed, in the study, 8 percent of patients 50-69 years old became  delirious.  
“It is imperative to be able to recognize those  patients admitted to the hospital with medical conditions who are at risk for  delirium so that they can be the focus of targeted prevention and treatment,” said  senior author S. Andrew Josephson, MD, director of the UCSF Neurohospitalist  Program and holder of the Carmen Castro Franceschi and Gladyne K. Mitchell Neurohospitalist  Distinguished Professorship.
INFORMATION:
Co-authors from UCSF are Christine S. Hessler, MD;  Gurpreet Dhaliwal, MD; John P. Betjemann, MD; Keiko A. Fukada, BA; Lama R.  Alameddine, MA; Rachael Lucatorto, MD; and S. Claiborne Johnson, MD, PhD.   
The research was supported by the Ruth E. Raskin  Fund and a UCSF Dean’s Research Scholarship. These funding agencies had no role  in the design and conduct of the study.
UCSF is a leading university dedicated to promoting  health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education  in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care.
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New tool helps detect delirium in hospital patients
UCSF researchers develop quick survey to assess risk for disturbances in mental cognition
2013-08-07
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[Press-News.org] New tool helps detect delirium in hospital patientsUCSF researchers develop quick survey to assess risk for disturbances in mental cognition