BEHAVIORAL Flashcards

1
Q

what is delirium?

A

acute organic mental syndrome with potentially reversible impairment of consciousness and cognitive function that fluctuates in severity

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2
Q

delirium has what types?

A
  • mixed (hyperactive and hypoactive type in same patient) is most common
  • hypoactive; second most common
  • hyperactive; least common
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3
Q

can a patient with dementia develop delirium in the hospital?

A

yes, it is superimposed on dementia

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4
Q

what are some risks for delirium?

A
  • preexisting dementia
  • history of HTN
  • history of EtOH (>2-3 drinks/day)
  • high severity of illness on admission
  • coma - primary neurological, sedative induced, multifactorial
  • benzos
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5
Q

how to assess delirium?

A
  1. must have acute onset, fluctuating course; is pt different than baseline mental status?
  2. must exhibit inattention; give letters attention test; positive if >2 errors

needs to exhibit 3 or 4:

  1. altered LOC
  2. disorganized thinking
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6
Q

how to treat delirium?

A
  • strategies to promote patient orientation
  • assess/manage environment
  • control clinical parameters
  • prevent/treat delirium secondary to substance abuse
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7
Q

how to prevent delirium?

A
Awakening - d/c sedation ASAP
Breathing trials - wean from vent ASAP
Communication/collaboration amongst staff
Delirium monitoring/management
Early progressive mobility and exercise
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8
Q

how to manage delirium pharmacologically?

A

generally used for hyperactive delirium not responsive to non-pharmacological measures

  • treat pain with analgesics if pain is thought to be the cause
  • use precedex for vented patients
  • use benzos for EtOH/benzo withdrawal patients
  • use precedex instead of benzos if unrelated to EtOH/benzo withdrawal
  • avoid antipsychotics if risk for torsades
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9
Q

which antipsychotic can be used for patients with delirium who might not tolerate benzos (respiratory depression or increased agitation)? what may be an adverse effect?

A

haloperidol; prolongs QT interval, may cause torsades

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10
Q

what is dementia?

A

neurocognitive disorder that affects brains ability to think, reason, and remember correctly; slow, progressive and permanent (most common is Alzheimer’s)

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11
Q

how is depression diagnosed?

A
  1. depressed mood OR
  2. loss of interest or pleasure in nearly all activities

plus 4 additional S/S from the following:

  • loss of appetite or weight +/-
  • insomnia/hypersomnia
  • psychomotor agitation or retardation
  • fatigue or loss of energy
  • feelings of worthlessness or guilt
  • impaired thinking or concentration; indecisiveness
  • suicidal thoughts/thoughts of death
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12
Q

how would you pharmacologically manage depression?

A
  • tricyclics (-triptyline or -pramine); lethal in overdose (tachycardia, hypotension, fatal arrhythmias), vertigo, dry mouth, dental caries, urinary retention, constipation, orthostatic hypotension, prolonged QT
  • SSRIs (-xetine, -lopram, -faxine) first line; adverse effects dose dependent, most subside after 1-2 weeks or after dose reduction; headache, ab pain, nausea, diarrhea, sleep changes, jitteriness or agitation; can induce manic/hypomanic episode; inhibit metabolism of antiarrhymics, benzos, warfarin, tricyclics, neuroleptics
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13
Q

what are some signs of EtOH withdrawal?

A
  • minor, initial changes (first 6-36 hours) tremors, mild anxiety, HA, diaphoresis, palpitations, anorexia, GI upset
  • sz may occur during first 48 hours
  • hallucinations after 12-48hrs
  • DTs may occur 48-96hrs with delirium, agitation, tachycardia, hypertension, fever, diaphoresis
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14
Q

how is EtOH withdrawal treated?

A
  • preventative therapy with benzos
  • CIWA/RASS
  • phenobarbital for refractory DTs
  • fluids to replace deficits
  • *glucose and thiamine to prevent Wenicke’s encephalopathy (gait disturbances, nystagmus, eye muscle paralysis) and Korsakoff syndrome (decreased spontaneity, amnesia, denial of memory loss by making up facts)
  • multivitamins with folate
  • correct electrolytes
  • quiet environment
  • restraints prn
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15
Q

what are some S/S of Benzo withdrawal? and when can it happen?

A
  • tremors, anxiety, perceptual disturbances, psychosis, sz

- 2-21 days after last dose

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16
Q

how is Benzo withdrawal managed?

A
  • benzo (same agent as patient was taking chronically) or long-acting Librium as patient warrants
17
Q

what are signs of opiate withdrawal? and when can it happen?

A
  • insomnia, restlessness, yawning, lacrimation, rhinorrhea, diaphoresis; vomiting, diarrhea, fever, chills, muscle spasm, tremor, tachycardia, hypertension
  • first 24hrs
18
Q

how is opiate withdrawal prevented/managed?

A
  • give opiates, preferably long-acting (methadone) in doses to control patient symptoms, gradually taper