Contents

Search


predisposing factors associated with delirium

From reference [1]: - older age - cognitive impairment, dementia - functional impairment: - physical impairment, visual impairment, hearing impairment, frailty - cardiovascular disease - multiple comorbidities - CNS disease: stroke, Parkinson's disease, previous delirium, olfactory disorder - alcohol use - male - depression - lower level of education - malnutrition - diabetes mellitus - tobacco use - anemia - psychiatric disorder or trait - female (does not make any sense; how can both male & female be predisposing?) - multiple medications - psychoactive medication - malignant neoplasm - chronic pain - pulmonary disease: obstructive sleep apnea, COPD - poor sleep quality - chronic kidney disease - non-English language - narcotic analgesic - white race - vitamin D deficiency - anticholinergic agents - biomarkers - biomarkers of neurodegeneration: - amyloid-beta 42 in CSF - MRI white matter hyperintensities - reduction in gray matter - thinner cerebral cortex - SNPs (SNVs) in DRD2 & SLC6A3 - APOE4 - AG haplotype of GRIN3A - COMT Val-127

Related

delirium (acute confusional state)

General

risk factors for delirium

References

  1. Ormseth CH, LaHue SC, Oldham MA et al Predisposing and Precipitating Factors Associated With Delirium. A Systematic Review. JAMA Netw Open. 2023;6(1):e2249950 PMID: 36607634 https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2800112