• Journal of critical care · Sep 2010

    Brain autopsy findings in intensive care unit patients previously suffering from delirium: a pilot study.

    • David R Janz, Ty W Abel, James C Jackson, Max L Gunther, Stephan Heckers, and E Wesley Ely.
    • Department of Internal Medicine, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN 37232-8300, USA. david.janz@vanderbilt.edu
    • J Crit Care. 2010 Sep 1;25(3):538.e7-12.

    PurposeDelirium affects 50% to 80% of intensive care unit (ICU) patients and is associated with increased risk of mortality. Given the paucity of data reporting the neuropathologic findings in ICU patients experiencing delirium, the purpose of this pilot, hypothesis-generating study was to evaluate brain autopsies in ICU patients who suffered from delirium to explore possible neuroanatomical correlates.Materials And MethodsUsing delirium databases at Vanderbilt University, we identified patients who had delirium in the ICU and subsequently died and received a brain autopsy during the same hospitalization. Brain autopsy reports were collected retrospectively on all 7 patients who met these criteria.ResultsPatients' mean age was 55 (SD ± 8.4) years, and median number of days spent with delirium was 7 (± 5 interquartile range). In 6 (86%) of 7 patients, pathologic lesions normally attributed to hypoxia or ischemia were noted in the hippocampus, pons, and striatum. Hippocampal lesions represented the most common neuropathologic site of injury, present in 5 (71%) of 7 patients.ConclusionsHypoxic ischemic injury in multiple locations of the brain was a common finding. The biological plausibility of hippocampal lesions as a contributor to long-term cognitive impairment warrants postmortem investigation on a larger scale with comparison to patients not experiencing ICU delirium.Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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