Dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease, is one of the most devastating conditions of older age.
Dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease, is one of the most devastating conditions of older age. Currently affecting nearly 7 million individuals in the U.S. and 24 million worldwide, dementia leads to total loss of memory and the ability to function independently – making it one of people’s greatest fears of aging.
Delirium is an acute confusional state, a common and serious complication in older individuals that often follows surgery or serious illness. Sometimes accompanied by disorientation, paranoia and hallucinations, delirium develops in 14 to 56 percent of all hospitalized seniors, complicating hospital stays for over 2.5 million older individuals in the U.S. each year.For the most part, dementia and delirium have been viewed as separate and distinct conditions. But a special section of The Journal of Gerontology: Medical Sciences, appearing in January 2007, looks at their interface, asking: Can delirium itself lead to the development of a cognitive disorder? Do delirium and dementia represent opposite ends of the same spectrum of disease, rather than two separate conditions?
“I have been studying delirium for 20 years,” says Sharon Inouye, MD, MPH, a geriatrician at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Director of the Aging Brain Center at the Institute for Aging Research, Hebrew SeniorLife. “And the more cases I encounter, the more linkages I see with dementia. For a large proportion of older patients, the problem [of delirium] is never resolved. I routinely hear from patients’ families, ‘They went into the hospital, they became very confused, and they never recovered.’”
Inouye, a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, together with Luigi Ferrucci, MD, PhD, Chief of the Longitudinal Studies Section of the National Institute on Aging and Editor-in-Chief of the journal, which is published by the Gerontological Society of America, examined the relationship between these two widespread conditions during the “Aging Brain Center Scientific Symposium: The Interface of Delirium and Dementia,” held last spring.
“Better understanding of delirium may represent a new window of opportunity for the prevention of dementia,” explains Ferrucci. “We, therefore, decided to approach the subject from a multidisciplinary perspective, exploring delirium and dementia from a number of vantage points.” Findings spawned from the symposium make up the five articles featured in the special issue of the journal, including:
Biomarkers. “There is currently no way of identifying delirium save for the observations of an astute clinician,” notes Inouye. In this review article, BIDMC geriatrician Edward Marcantonio, MD, examines a number of promising biomarkers for delirium, including serum chemistries, genetic markers, serum anticholinergic activity, neurotransmitters, inflammatory markers and cortisol.
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Use of SPECT scanning to assess cerebral perfusion changes in patients with delirium. Led by Tamara Fong, MD, of BIDMC’s Department of Neurology, this paper describes the results of a study examining a group of hospitalized patients, which shows that frontal or parietal cerebral perfusion abnormalities occur in cases of delirium. These results suggest localized involvement in the brain’s frontal and parietal lobes with delirium, which may correlate with the clinical findings and long-term outcomes.
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The potential role for cognitive reserve. Inouye, together with BIDMC gerontologist Richard Jones, ScD, an investigator in the Institute for Aging Research at Hebrew SeniorLife, report their findings showing that hospitalized older persons with lower levels of education may be at increased risk for delirium relative to older persons with more education. “People have varying degrees of cognitive reserve, the capability to withstand insults and stresses to their system [such as might occur in a hospital setting],” explains Inouye. “Our study shows that amount of education correlates with brain resiliency, perhaps by building greater numbers of neuronal pathways.”
Delirium is a tremendous expense to the country’s medical system, amounting to more than $7 billion per year in hospital expenses and more than $100 billion a year when rehabilitation, institutionalization and long-term care is factored in.
In a 1999 study in The New England Journal of Medicine, Inouye demonstrated that delirium can be decreased by 40 percent by implementing a number of straightforward interventions while patients are hospitalized. These include making sure that patients are oriented and hydrated, that they are up and walking, that they are using their hearing aids and vision aids, and that they avoid the use of sleep medications.
'Our goal now is to better understand the fundamental changes that cause delirium and determine whether they result in permanent injury to the brain, in order to better devise ways to intervene and prevent this injury,' explains Inouye. 'Knowing that our population is rapidly aging, these figures are only going to increase unless we do something now. We hope to eventually be able to identify at-risk individuals before they develop delirium, so that we can intervene before it escalates to a chronic condition.'
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