Practical Application of a Battery of Brief Tools to Evaluate Geriatric Medical Inpatients for the Three Ds.

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-09-05 DOI:10.1176/appi.neuropsych.20230029
Marcela Alviz Núñez, María Margarita Villa García, Maria Carolina Gonzalez, María Botero Urrea, Juan D Velásquez-Tirado, María V Ocampo, Paula T Trzepacz, José G Franco
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Abstract

Objective: The investigators aimed to identify the clinical characteristics of patients with or without delirium and preexisting depression, dementia, both, or neither by using validated tools easily administered in clinical practice.

Methods: In this cross-sectional prospective observational study conducted in Medellín, Colombia, 200 geriatric inpatients were evaluated with the Delirium Diagnostic Tool-Provisional (DDT-Pro), Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly, Hachinski Ischemic Scale, Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia, and Charlson Comorbidity Index-short form. Delirium motor subtype, mortality, and length of hospital stay were assessed.

Results: The study included 134 patients without delirium (67%), 14 with delirium only (7%), 16 with delirium and dementia (8%), 13 with delirium and depression (7%), and 23 with delirium, dementia, and depression (the three Ds) (12%). Prevalence rates of dementia (59%) and depression (55%) among 66 patients with delirium were higher than prevalence rates among patients without delirium (13% and 28%, respectively), suggesting that both conditions are risk factors. Main medical diagnoses, mortality, and dementia type did not differ among groups. Motor subtypes were similar among delirium groups. Patients in the delirium groups, except those in the delirium and depression group, were older than patients without delirium. Medical burden was highest among the patients with delirium and dementia and those with all three conditions. Delirium and dementia were more severe when comorbid with each other. Depression was most severe among patients with delirium and depression. Patients with all three conditions had a longer length of hospital stay than those without delirium.

Conclusions: Using brief tools to detect dementia and depression in conjunction with the DDT-Pro to assess delirium diagnosis and severity is feasible and enables a more in-depth evaluation of elderly hospitalized patients. Because previous longitudinal research suggests that these comorbid conditions influence prognosis following a delirium episode, better identification of the three Ds offers proactive interventional opportunities. Depression is an underrecognized risk factor for delirium.

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实际应用简易工具电池,评估老年住院病人的 "三D "情况。
研究目的研究人员旨在通过使用临床实践中易于使用的有效工具,确定患有或不患有谵妄和原有抑郁症、痴呆症、两者均有或两者均无的患者的临床特征:在哥伦比亚麦德林进行的这项横断面前瞻性观察研究中,使用谵妄诊断工具临时版(DDT-Pro)、老年人认知功能衰退知情者问卷、哈钦斯基缺血量表、康奈尔痴呆抑郁量表和夏尔森合并症指数简表对 200 名老年住院患者进行了评估。对谵妄运动亚型、死亡率和住院时间进行了评估:研究包括 134 名无谵妄的患者(67%)、14 名仅有谵妄的患者(7%)、16 名有谵妄和痴呆的患者(8%)、13 名有谵妄和抑郁的患者(7%)以及 23 名有谵妄、痴呆和抑郁(三D)的患者(12%)。在 66 名谵妄患者中,痴呆(59%)和抑郁(55%)的患病率高于无谵妄患者(分别为 13% 和 28%),这表明这两种情况都是风险因素。各组患者的主要医疗诊断、死亡率和痴呆类型没有差异。各组谵妄患者的运动亚型相似。除谵妄和抑郁组患者外,其他谵妄组患者的年龄均大于无谵妄组患者。谵妄和痴呆患者以及同时患有这三种疾病的患者的医疗负担最重。合并谵妄和痴呆的患者病情更为严重。患有谵妄和抑郁症的患者抑郁情况最为严重。与没有谵妄的患者相比,患有这三种疾病的患者住院时间更长:结论:将检测痴呆和抑郁的简易工具与评估谵妄诊断和严重程度的 DDT-Pro 结合使用是可行的,可以对老年住院患者进行更深入的评估。以往的纵向研究表明,这些并发症会影响谵妄发作后的预后,因此更好地识别这三种并发症可提供积极干预的机会。抑郁是导致谵妄的一个未被充分认识的风险因素。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.40%
发文量
67
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: As the official Journal of the American Neuropsychiatric Association, the premier North American organization of clinicians, scientists, and educators specializing in behavioral neurology & neuropsychiatry, neuropsychology, and the clinical neurosciences, the Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences (JNCN) aims to publish works that advance the science of brain-behavior relationships, the care of persons and families affected by neurodevelopmental, acquired neurological, and neurodegenerative conditions, and education and training in behavioral neurology & neuropsychiatry. JNCN publishes peer-reviewed articles on the cognitive, emotional, and behavioral manifestations of neurological conditions, the structural and functional neuroanatomy of idiopathic psychiatric disorders, and the clinical and educational applications and public health implications of scientific advances in these areas. The Journal features systematic reviews and meta-analyses, narrative reviews, original research articles, scholarly considerations of treatment and educational challenges in behavioral neurology & neuropsychiatry, analyses and commentaries on advances and emerging trends in the field, international perspectives on neuropsychiatry, opinions and introspections, case reports that inform on the structural and functional bases of neuropsychiatric conditions, and classic pieces from the field’s rich history.
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