View clinical trials related to Delirium.
Filter by:Postoperative delirium is with increased incidence in elderly patients. Previous studies have shown that acupuncture related techniques could induce protection against brain ischemia and improve outcome after cerebral diseases. In this study the effect of transcutaneous electrical acupoint stimulation combined with auricular acupressure on postoperative delirium will be evaluated.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate associations between neuronal damage biomarkers (S100 calcium-binding protein beta [S-100β], neuron-specific enolase [NSE], ubiquitin carboxy-terminal hydrolase L1 [UCHL1], and brain-derived neurotropic factor [BDNF]) and delirium severity and subsyndromal delirium in a homogeneous population of mechanically ventilated patients with sepsis.
By the year 2038, over a million Canadians are expected to have Alzheimer's disease, a type of dementia. Dementia increases the risk of nursing home placement among the elderly more than fivefold. Given the exceptionally vulnerable nature of this patient population, there is a pressing need to ensure that the clinical care they receive is evidence-based, tailored specifically for them, and meeting the high standards of quality that would be expected in any other health-care setting. Delirium is a sudden and severe change in brain function that can cause a person to appear confused or disoriented, have memory loss, and have difficulties maintaining focus. It is an urgent care issue facing elderly patients residing in nursing homes, or long-term care (LTC) facilities. Delirium is a significant cause of illness and mortality, affecting between 10%-89% of LTC patients, but little research has focused on delirium prevention in the LTC setting. This study will assess the effectiveness of a LTC multicomponent delirium prevention program (PREPARED Trial intervention). The PREPARED Trial intervention is an intervention provided to nursing staff working in LTC facilities that consists of four components: a decision tree, an instruction manual, a training package, and a toolkit. The feasibility and acceptability of the PREPARED Trial intervention has already been successfully demonstrated; however, a thorough and well-designed large scale study is needed in order to confirm its ability to reduce delirium among LTC residents. In this study, approximately 40-50 LTC facilities will be randomized to either receive the PREPARED Trial intervention or to receive usual care. At the end of the 4-year study period, the investigators will be able to demonstrate the degree to which the PREPARED Trial intervention reduces: 1) the number of new cases of delirium; 2) delirium severity; and 3) the duration of delirium episodes. This study will provide the blueprint of a program that can be transferable to LTC facilities across Canada.
The aim of this investigation is to compare the standard of general anesthesia used in these patients with these short-acting local anesthetics (Chloroprocain (Ampres®) and Prilocain (Takipril®)) for spinal anesthesia as well as to report the patient centered outcome of postoperative delirium and neurocognitive disorder. In accordance to current evidence regarding the occurrence of postoperative delirium and postoperative cognitive deficit, patients are to be screened daily for delirium up to the fifth postoperative day if in hospital, or till the first postoperative day after ambulatory surgery and for neurocognitive disorder 1 year following the surgery. To detect delirium the Nu-DESC (Nursing Delirium Screening Scale) will be used as a validated scoring systems to ensure the highest sensitivity in delirium identification. CANTAB battery will be used for assessment of neurocognitive disorder. This is a neuropsychological testing (computer-based (I-Pad) [Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery - CANTAB connect and parameters from the item list], as well as the subjective / by proxy Assessment of Cognitive Limitations. It is essential to perform the appropriate cognitive performance tests not only on operative patients but also on a non-surgical cohort, using currently established models of calculation in postoperative cognitive deficits and a control group generated from non-surgical patients.
The overall goal of this research project is to elucidate underlying pathophysiological mechanisms of postoperative delirium (POD) and to specifically validate perioperative predictive factors that will help in indentifying patients at higher risk of developing POD. 1. The main objective is to evaluate whether intraoperative frontal alpha power in unprocessed electroencephalogram (EEG), under general anesthesia, is associated with the occurrence of POD, and whether specific patterns worrelate with the patient's preoperative cognitive status. 2. As apolipoprotein E (APOE) polymorphism has been shown to be a risk factor of POD, we will specifically analyze whether patients who are APOEe4 carriers present different intraoperative EEG patterns in terms of anteriorization of the alpha frequency band under general anesthesia, and investigate whether the APOEe4 carriers are at higher risk of POD. 3. In this research project, we will also analyze the perioperative kinetics of serum neurofilament light chain protein (NfL), a biomarker of neuronal injury. We will specifically analyze whether preoperative, as well as postoperative serum NfL levels are higher in patients presenting POD, compared to those who do not experience POD. This will allow studying whether neuronal damage may be involved in the pathogenesis of POD.
The intravenous administration of anesthetic agents by a controller automatically-guided by an index of cerebral activity (i.e. the bispectral index) decreases the incidence of postoperative delirium, compared with an inhalational anesthesia.
Postoperative delirium (POD) is a common postoperative complication that can occur in patients of any age. POD brings great burden to patients and their families, as the following cognitive decline may persist for months to years to impede patients returning to previous life quality and employment. The PREDICt study aims to characterize the incidence and profiles of POD in ICU, and to find out risk factors, especially any are modifiable, and any have value for developing prediction model. Our final aim is to comprehensively and deeply explore the etiology of POD to guide prevention of delirium among postoperative patients.
In the world, 230 million surgeries are performed every year and US data indicates that more than a third of patients who undergo surgery are older than 65 years, in which between 10 and 70% develop postoperative delirium (POD). Patients who develop POD have poor outcomes, such as a longer hospital stay, a deterioration in functional and cognitive status, high mortality rates, and an increase in health costs. Delirium is an entity that in a significant percentage is preventable, thus preventing the development of POD is fundamental. In fact, in older adults hospitalized in the no surgical ward, the implementation of non-pharmacological prevention measures of delirium has consistently shown to significantly prevent the development of this condition. However, limited information is available about the usefulness of non-pharmacological intervention protocols applied in the perioperative context to prevent POD. The main aim of this project is to determine whether the application of non-pharmacological measures during the perioperative period prevents POD in elderly patients undergoing highly complex elective surgeries. The hypothesis is that the application of these measures decreases the incidence of delirium in this population.
To determine if daytime bright light will promote circadian alignment and shorten or prevent delirium.
Assessment of serum level of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) before surgery (on the day of surgery), 24 hours after surgery and on 3 or 4 postoperative day. Neuropsychological testing before surgery and on 3 or 4 day after surgery. Investigation of relationship between changes of GFAP and scores of neuropsychological tests.