Altered mental status
Revision as of 01:26, 20 December 2013 by Rossdonaldson1 (talk | contribs)
Background
- Alteration of arousal or content of consciousness or both
- Both cerebral cortices or brainstem must be affected
- Delirium vs dementia vs psych
- Must quickly determine if coma is from diffuse or focal impairment
- Peds
- Most common causes are toxic ingestion, infection, and child-abuse induced trauma
Clinical Features
- Depends on cause
- Diffuse brain dysfunction - lack of focal findings
- Focal brain dysfunction - hemiparesis, loss of motor tone, loss of ocular reflexes
DDX
- Diffuse brain dysfunction
- Encephalopathies
- Hypoxic encephalopathy
- Metabolic encephalopathy
- Hypoglycemia
- Hyperosmolar state (e.g., hyperglycemia)
- Electrolyte abnormalities (hypernatremia or hyponatremia, hypercalcemia)
- Organ system failure
- Hepatic encephalopathy
- Uremia/renal failure
- Endocrine (Addison disease, hypothyroidism)
- Hypoxia
- CO2 narcosis
- Hypertensive encephalopathy
- Toxins
- Drug reactions (NMS)
- Environmental causes
- Hypothermia
- Hyperthermia
- Deficiency state
- Wernicke encephalopathy
- Sepsis
- Encephalopathies
- Primary CNS disease or trauma
- Direct CNS trauma
- Diffuse axonal injury
- Subdural/epidural hematoma
- Vascular disease
- Intraparenchymal hemorrhage
- SAH
- Infarction
- Hemispheric, brainstem
- CNS infections
- Neoplasms
- Seizures
- Nonconvulsive status epilepticus
- Consider if motor activity of seizure has stopped but pt is not alert w/in 30min
- Postictal state
- Nonconvulsive status epilepticus
- Direct CNS trauma
Work-Up
- Head CT
Treatment
- Pts w/ focal findings may have surgically treatable cause
- Coma cocktail
- Glucose, thiamine, naloxone
Delirium
Clinical Features
- Impairment of arousal and content of consciousness
- Generally develops over days
- Symptoms may be intermittent and vary in severity
Workup
- CBC
- Chemistry
- LFTs
- UA
- CXR
- ?Utox
- ?CT/LP
DDX
- A
- Alcohol
- E
- Electrolytes
- Encephalopathy (hepatic, hypertensive)
- I
- Insulin (hypoglycemia)
- O
- Opiates
- U
- Uremia
- T
- Trauma
- Tox
- Thyrotoxicosis
- I
- Infection
- PNA, UTI, meningitis/encephalitis, sepsis
- Infection
- P
- Psych
- S
- Seizure
- Stroke
Treatment
- Treat underlying cause
Dementia
Clinical Features
- Loss of mental capacity
- Slow and steady course
- Hallucinations, delusions, repetitive behaviors, and depression are all common
- May coexist w/ delirium
- Poor score on Mini-Mental State Exam
DDX
- Degenerative
- Alzheimer's disease
- Huntington's disease
- Parkinson's disease
- Vascular
- Multiple infarcts
- Hypoperfusion (MI, profound hypotension)
- Subdural hematoma
- SAH
- Infectious
- Meningitis (sequelae of bacterial, fungal, or tubercular)
- Neurosyphilis
- Viral encephalitis (herpes, HIV), Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
- Inflammatory
- SLE
- Demyelinating disease
- Neoplastic
- Primary tumors / metastatic disease
- Carcinomatous meningitis
- Paraneoplastic syndromes
- Traumatic
- Traumatic brain injury
- Subdural hematoma
- Toxic
- ETOH
- Meds (anticholinergics, polypharmacy)
- Metabolic
- B12 or folate deficiency
- Thyroid disease
- Uremia
- Psychiatric
- Depression (pseudodementia)
- Hydrocephalic
- Normal-pressure hydrocephalus (communicating hydrocephalus)
- Noncommunicating hydrocephalus
Work-Up
- Must rule-out treatable causes of dementia / delirium (see DDX)
- CBC
- Chemistry
- LFTs
- UA
- CXR
- ?Utox
- ?CT/LP
Treatment
- Treat underlying cause (if possible)
See Also
- Toxicology (Main)
- Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS)
- Altered Mental Status (AMS) (Peds)
- AVPU Scale
- Brain Death
Source
Tintinalli
