Articles producció científica> Medicina i Cirurgia

Subsyndromal delirium compared with delirium, dementia, and subjects without delirium or dementia in elderly general hospital admissions and nursing home residents

  • Identification data

    Identifier: imarina:6388960
    Handle: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11797/imarina6388960
  • Authors:

    Sepulveda E
    Leonard M
    Franco J
    Adamis D
    McCarthy G
    Dunne C
    Trzepacz P
    Gaviria A
    de Pablo J
    Vilella E
    Meagher D
  • Others:

    Author, as appears in the article.: Sepulveda E; Leonard M; Franco J; Adamis D; McCarthy G; Dunne C; Trzepacz P; Gaviria A; de Pablo J; Vilella E; Meagher D
    Department: Medicina i Cirurgia
    URV's Author/s: FRANCO VÁSQUEZ, JOSÉ GABRIEL / Vilella Cuadrada, Elisabet
    Keywords: Subsyndromal Elderly Diagnosis Dementia Delirium elderly diagnosis dementia delirium
    Abstract: © 2016 The Authors Introduction Subsyndromal delirium (SSD) complicates diagnosis of delirium and dementia, although there is little research comparing their symptom profiles. Methods Cross-sectional study of 400 elderly patients’ admission to a general hospital or nursing home diagnosed with delirium, SSD, dementia, or no-delirium/no-dementia (NDND). Symptom profiles were assessed using the Delirium Rating Scale-Revised-98 (DRS-R98). Results Twenty percent patients had delirium, 19.3% had SSD, 29.8% had dementia-only, and 31% had NDND. Eighty-one percent of subsyndromal and 76% of delirium groups had comorbid dementia. DRS-R98 scores showed ascending severity from NDND < dementia-only < SSD < delirium. DRS-R98 scores for items evaluating the three core symptom domains (cognitive, higher-order thinking, and circadian) distinguished SSD from delirium and both from nondelirium groups. DRS-R98 profiles were essentially the same in delirium and SSD subgroups with or without dementia, although total scale scores were generally higher when in comorbid subgroups. Discussion SSD shared characteristic core domain symptoms with delirium, which distinguished each from nondelirium groups, although severity was intermediate in the subsyndromal group. Delirium core symptoms overshadowed the dementia phenotype when comorbid. Milder disturbances of delirium core domain symptoms are highly suggestive of SSD.
    Thematic Areas: Psychiatry and mental health Neurosciences Neurology (clinical) Medicina ii Clinical neurology
    licence for use: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/
    ISSN: 23528729
    Author's mail: elisabet.vilella@urv.cat
    Author identifier: 0000-0002-1887-5919
    Record's date: 2023-02-26
    Papper version: info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
    Link to the original source: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28116342/
    Licence document URL: http://repositori.urv.cat/ca/proteccio-de-dades/
    Papper original source: Alzheimers Dement (Amst). 7 1-10
    APA: Sepulveda E; Leonard M; Franco J; Adamis D; McCarthy G; Dunne C; Trzepacz P; Gaviria A; de Pablo J; Vilella E; Meagher D (2017). Subsyndromal delirium compared with delirium, dementia, and subjects without delirium or dementia in elderly general hospital admissions and nursing home residents. Alzheimers Dement (Amst), 7(), 1-10. DOI: 10.1016/j.dadm.2016.11.002
    Article's DOI: 10.1016/j.dadm.2016.11.002
    Entity: Universitat Rovira i Virgili
    Journal publication year: 2017
    Publication Type: Journal Publications
  • Keywords:

    Clinical Neurology,Neurology (Clinical),Neurosciences,Psychiatry and Mental Health
    Subsyndromal
    Elderly
    Diagnosis
    Dementia
    Delirium
    elderly
    diagnosis
    dementia
    delirium
    Psychiatry and mental health
    Neurosciences
    Neurology (clinical)
    Medicina ii
    Clinical neurology
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