View clinical trials related to Delirium.
Filter by:The aim of this study is to evaluate how C-reactive protein (CRP) and homocysteine and their interaction contribute to postoperative delirium, based on our previous finding on the interactions of CRP, homocysteine and postoperative delirium.
This research is designed for experimental quantitative research and is conducted by simple random sampling. Both the control group and the experimental group provided preoperative routine nursing treatment and preoperative medical teaching manuals. The latter adds cognitive therapy and gamification evaluation. Both groups used CAM-ICU to assess the occurrence and duration of postoperative delirium, and DRS-R-98 was used to assess the severity of delirium. After collection, use SPSS 22.0 statistical software package for analysis and processing. The expected result is that the incidence of delirium, the duration of delirium, and the severity of delirium in the experimental group were significantly lower than those in the control group.
The objective of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of trazodone as compared to quetiapine and placebo, in the management of ICU delirium in adult (>=18 years old) surgical ICU patients. The investigators will compare outcomes such as delirium incidence and duration, in-hospital mortality, 28-day mortality, hospital length of stay (LOS), ICU LOS, mechanical ventilator days, complications, adverse effects, rescue medication use, delirium symptom severity, sleep duration, and sleep quality among participants receiving trazodone, quetiapine, or placebo. The investigators hypothesize participants receiving trazodone will have a shorter duration of delirium, decreased delirium severity, and improved sleep quality compared to participants receiving quetiapine and placebo.
An assessment of the feasibility of structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain scans in older people who have recovered from and older people who never had delirium after hip fracture surgery
The purpose of this study is the efficiency of es-ketamine on postoperative delirium among old patients with elective lobectomy
Introduction: Intensive care unit (ICU) is a special department in the health care facility. Although with high development of modern medicine nowadays, the average mortality rate in ICU is still around 7 to 20 %. There are a few tricky problems that intensivists and ICU nurses faced very often, including ICU delirium, arrhythmia and poor digestion problem that will all affect the mortality and morbidity rate of critical care patients. Methods: A randomized control trial will examine the effect of press tack acupuncture vs. press tack placebos. The patients will be randomly divided (1:1) into one of two groups. A total of 80 ICU patients will have to meet the following criteria: age 20-90, newly ICU admission(<48 hours), APACHE score <30, one or no inotropic medicine use, FiO2< 60%. Three interventions will be given in each group. The main outcomes will be the incidence of arrhythmia, delirium, and poor digestion and the severity of pain. We will also record ICU mortality, ICU stays and hospital days.
The relationship between zonulin and interleukin-8 levels and postoperative delirium development in patients who had femur fracture surgery under regional anesthesia
3D CAM into Turkish validity and reliability on postoperative delirium will be test as a prospective diagnostic study. After approval by Dr. Edward R. Marcantonio, (15) will translation and back-translation. The original 3D-CAM will translate into Turkish by two medical doctor .The two translational versions will be discussed and merged into a final version. Back translation will performed in regardless of any information from its original version by another two medical doctor. Both the translated and back translated versions will sent to Dr. Marcantonio for approval. Eligibility and the documentation of consent will be confirmed at the preoperative visit. During this visit, patients will provide demographic and historical medical information, including information regarding medication usage. The Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE) will be performed. Delirium assessment Delirium assessment with the 3D-CAM Before the study period, all researchers will participate online training program on 3D CAM. Delirium will be evaluated using the 3D CAM every each morning and evening (18:00-20:00) for postoperative 3 days. Delirium assessment with the DSM-5 The psychiatrist investigator who was blinded to the 3D-CAM assessment results, will evaluate the patients according to the criteria of DSM-5 within 3 min after the 3D-CAM assessment.
Delirium in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) is a serious problem that has recently attracted much attention. This study will evaluate the use of electroencephalogram (EEG) for delirium screening in the PICU.
As the population of older adults increases, so too with the number of older adult patients that present for anesthesia and surgery. The development of delirium following surgery has some significant potential effects on patient outcomes; however, POD is often under diagnosed. Some studies reported that more than 50% of patients with delirium were undiagnosed by clinical teams. POD is associated with cognitive decline, increased hospital length of stay, discharge to institutional care, mortality and higher healthcare costs. POD contributes significantly to healthcare inefficiency; a diagnosis of POD is estimated by the Australian Commission on Quality and Safety in Healthcare to cost an additional $27,791 AUD. The incidence of POD reported in clinical trials depends on the risk profile of the study population, the frequency and duration of delirium assessments as well as the surgical procedure. Reported incidence may also vary due to the presence of high-risk pathways involving multi-specialty management and intervention. POD may present as either hyperactive or hypoactive subtypes, the latter being more difficult to detect. There are few reports on the incidence of POD in New Zealand national level datasets, with single centre studies primarily looking at in-hospital delirium and demonstrating an incidence of 11.2 to 29% on mixed and/or medical wards. A review of elderly patients with neck-of-femur fractures found the incidences of POD to be as high as 39%. The current data suggests a significant level of morbidity due to POD in New Zealand hospitals, however there is lack of national level data in the surgical population; which is crucial for establishing demographic and regional need for effective intervention.