Deutsche medizinische Wochenschrift
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Dtsch. Med. Wochenschr. · Nov 2019
[Detection of delirium in three steps - From Screening to Verification to Etiology].
Clinicians are commonly confronted with the differential diagnosis of altered mental status, impaired cognition and altered level of consciousness in hospitalized patients including those admitted to medical, geriatric, emergency, intensive and post-operative care units. Although delirium is the most common acute neuropsychiatric condition in the acute hospital setting this diagnosis is commonly delayed, made too late or missed altogether. ⋯ The causes of delirious states are manifold. Both, direct damage to the brain tissue as well as encephalopathy as a result of other medical diseases, can be the cause of delirium. Depending on the predisposition delirious syndromes can be provoked by minor medical interventions. Clinical presentation is very variable, but remains largely independent of the triggering mechanisms. Purely catatonic, hypoactive, hyperactive and excitatory types as well as mixed forms can be distinguished.Immediate diagnosis of a delirious syndrome and rapid elucidation of its causes are keys for the implementation of curative therapy. There is a need to act fast because delirious phases are associated with significantly longer hospital stay and increased morbidity as a result of long-term cognitive deficits as well as increased mortality. As negative outcome is closely linked to the duration of a delirious episode, early diagnosis and rapid termination of the delirium constitute a significant positive predictor of outcome. In this respect, delirium represents an emergency, with or without concomitant cerebral or extracerebral symptoms.
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A delirium in patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) is a manifestation of a severe acute dysfunction of the brain. It has a high prevalence and is associated with a relevant increase in morbidity and mortality. A cholinergic deficit and dopaminergic overactivity are considered to be a cause of delirium. ⋯ Non-pharmacological measures are always the basis for the prevention of delirium: maintenance of the day-night rhythm, sleep promotion at night and stimulation during the day, involvement of relatives, the avoidance of dehydration and malnutrition, and others more. They are pharmacologically accompanied by an effective analgesia and a target and symptom-oriented sedation with well controllable, as little as possible delirogenic substances. Interdisciplinary and interprofessional cooperation is essential so that preventive concepts significantly reduce the risk of delirium, even in high-risk patients.
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Dtsch. Med. Wochenschr. · Nov 2019
[Multi-disciplinary anonymous survey on a university hospital's medical doctors' knowledge of established terms and parameters in evidence-based medicine].
Patient care according to the principles of evidence-based medicine (EbM) is defined by the Social Code (SGB, inter alia § 137f SGB V). As part of quality assurance in medicine, a mandatory further education for doctors is demanded. The aim of this investigation was to evaluate how familiar medical practitioners are with common terms and parameters of EbM. Another question was, at which point of the medical training a possible postgraduate training on EbM methods should take place. ⋯ Medical practitioners at university hospitals can be expected to have certain knowledge on common methods of clinical research. However, less than 50 % of the answer were correct and a need for further training in EbM-specific methods appears to be indicated. The survey did not provide information on the optimal timing of such offers during medical training.
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Dtsch. Med. Wochenschr. · Nov 2019
Case Reports[Non-occlusive Mesenteric Ischemia caused by Diabetic Ketoacidosis - Pneumatosis intestinalis and Portal Venous Gas as an Indication of Mesenteric Ischemia].
A 67-year-old woman was found lying naked on the bathroom floor for at least the last 12 hours. She had a medical history of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus type 2 and a resection of the cecal pole. ⋯ The clinic of the AMI is manifold - with fatal consequences in case of delayed diagnosis. Serum parameters are often overestimated. In this case report a diabetic coma was responsible for the AMI. The diagnosis was based on sonographic imaging followed by computed tomography, so that the life-saving operation could be performed. Therefore, sonography should be considered as a mandatory examination of critically ill patients.