• Arch Intern Med · Feb 1992

    Delirium. The occurrence and persistence of symptoms among elderly hospitalized patients.

    • S E Levkoff, D A Evans, B Liptzin, P D Cleary, L A Lipsitz, T T Wetle, C H Reilly, D M Pilgrim, J Schor, and J Rowe.
    • Division of Aging, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass. 02115.
    • Arch Intern Med. 1992 Feb 1;152(2):334-40.

    AbstractWe evaluated the occurrence and persistence of delirium in 325 elderly patients admitted to a teaching hospital from either a defined community or a long-term care facility. Of the study participants, 34 (10.5%) had Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition--defined delirium at initial evaluation; of the remaining patients, 91 (31.3%) developed new-onset delirium. An additional 110 patients also experienced individual symptoms of delirium without meeting full criteria. Preexisting cognitive impairment and advanced age were associated with increased risk of incident delirium in the community sample but not the institutional one. Delirium was not associated with an increased risk of mortality, but it was associated with a prolonged hospital stay and an increased risk of institutional placement among community-dwelling elderly. Only five patients (4%) experienced resolution of all new symptoms of delirium before hospital discharge, and only 20.8% and 17.7%, respectively, had resolution of all new symptoms by 3 and 6 months after hospital discharge. These data suggest that delirium is a common disorder that may be substantially less transient than currently believed and that incomplete manifestations of the syndrome may be frequent.

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