Current opinion in psychiatry
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Curr Opin Psychiatry · May 2007
ReviewCannabis use and psychiatric and cogitive disorders: the chicken or the egg?
Cannabis is the world's most commonly used illicit drug. In this review, we consider the recent literature on the effects of cannabis on mental health and on cognition. ⋯ Further research is needed to understand the biological mechanisms underlying the effects of cannabis on mental health, but intervention strategies to help patients abstain should currently be implemented in psychiatric services, and public education campaigns should be directed at increasing awareness of the health risks of cannabis.
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Delirium remains one of the most common complicating diagnoses in ailing elderly patients and a leading cause of morbidity, decreased quality of life, prolonged hospital stay, institutionalization and mortality. Despite its clinical importance and health-related costs, it often remains unrecognized or misdiagnosed. We evaluate currently available tools for the screening and diagnosis of delirium, their relevance and suitability for use in various clinical settings, as well as interobserver consistency amongst doctors and other nonclinician interviewers. ⋯ Despite advances on the pathophysiology and recognition of delirium, its detection relies on individual clinical expertise, a high index of suspicion and repeated cognitive testing of high-risk patients. Delirium diagnosis remains a clearly underresearched area; particularly, more work is required to adapt cognitive screening tools for use by nonclinicians, to develop cost-effective biochemical and molecular diagnostic techniques and to assess the effects of divulging updated consensus guidelines.