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. 1965 Nov 27;93(22):1156-66.

Diagnosis and treatment of delirium

Diagnosis and treatment of delirium

W D Henry et al. Can Med Assoc J. .

Abstract

Delirium is not a clinical entity but a symptom-complex of manifold etiology. Its presence signifies acute cerebral insufficiency and often represents a medical and/or psychiatric emergency.Though some forms of delirium have distinctive features, the fundamental phenomena are common to all, with clouding of consciousness the sine qua non. The condition has two major components: (1) the basic "acute brain syndrome" and (2) associated release phenomena.Clinicians must first make the vital differentiation between delirium and "functional" mental disorder, then proceed with the elucidation of the underlying diagnosis and the concurrent organization of symptomatic and etiologic treatment.Proper treatment combines management of the acute brain syndrome with general and specific procedures for control of the underlying condition. Dealing with the symptom-complex itself involves the principles and practice of sedation, hydration, and nutrition, nursing care and supportive measures. Provided the basic organic condition is treatable, the prognosis today is usually good.

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