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History Taking for the Onset of Acute Confusion
- diagnosis of delirium requires both major plus any one minor criteria
- Can remember the criteria using the mnemonic AIDS:
- Acute onset and fluctuating course
- Disorder of attention (inattention)
- Disorganized thinking
- Alterations in sensorium (e.g. visual or auditory hallucinations)
- need several iterations of the history, from several caregivers (may have large inter-observer differences in opinion)
- onset
- acute (<2-3 months)
- chronic (> 3 months represents a dementing state)
- progress
- gradual decline, static, rate of fluctuation
- palliating
- precipitating
- quality
- AIDS
- altered LOC
- disorientation
- memory
- psychomotor agitation/retardation
- altered sleep-wake cycle
- severity
- ADL → getting out of bed, using the bathroom, dressing, ambulation
- IADL → cooking, laundry, shopping, banking, paying bills, driving
- safety concerns
- cognitive function (MMSE)
- symptoms
- behaviour changes - agitation
- SAH → thunderclap headache
- stroke → aphasia, paralysis
- UTI → dysuria
- pneumonia → cyanosis, cough, sputum, fever
- benzodiazepines
- beta-blockers
- anticholinergics
- trauma
- stroke
- CAD
- endocrinopathy
- kidney
- psych
- EtOH
- social support (caregiver stress), living arrangements
- sleep pattern
- visual changes
- hearing loss
- constipation
- incontinence
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Original source: https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Acute Confusion (OSCE)
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