Delirium
Basics
Description
- Delirium is a clinical syndrome characterized by acute changes in awareness, cognition, and perception with a waxing and waning course
- Often secondary to an underlying acute medical condition
- Multifactorial pathophysiology including neuroinflammation, brain vascular dysfunction, altered brain metabolism, and neurotransmitter imbalance
- Frequently underrecognized by emergency medicine physicians
- Associated with irreversible cognitive decline and increased risk of admission, hospital length of stay, and mortality
Etiology
- Neurologic:
- Meningitis or encephalitis
- Seizure
- Wernicke encephalopathy
- Hypoxia and hypoperfusion of the brain
- Intracranial bleed or mass
- Stroke syndrome
- Pulmonary:
- Pneumonia
- Other pulmonary etiology of hypoxia or hypercapnia
- Cardiovascular:
- Hypertensive crisis
- Acute coronary syndromes
- Arrhythmia
- GI:
- Hepatic encephalopathy
- Dehydration
- Renal:
- UTI
- Acute renal failure
- Endocrine:
- Hypoglycemia
- Hyperglycemia
- Hypothyroid
- Rheumatologic:
- Collagen vascular disorder
- Toxicologic:
- Medications or supplements
- Withdrawal from barbiturates or alcohol
- Environmental toxins
- Other:
- Electrolyte abnormalities
- Vitamin deficiencies
- Hypothermia
- Hyperthermia
- Trauma
- Surgery
Geriatric Considerations
- Common presentation in older ED patients
- Up to 20% of older ED patients may have delirium
- Many patients will present with subtle symptoms and vague chief complaints
- Waxing and waning symptoms
- Dementia is a significant risk factor for delirium
- Long ED length-of-stay is a risk factor as well
- May be a life-threatening condition
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Citation
Schaider, Jeffrey J., et al., editors. "Delirium." 5-Minute Emergency Consult, 6th ed., Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2020. Emergency Central, emergency.unboundmedicine.com/emergency/view/5-Minute_Emergency_Consult/307250/2.2/Delirium.
Delirium. In: Schaider JJJ, Barkin RMR, Hayden SRS, et al, eds. 5-Minute Emergency Consult. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2020. https://emergency.unboundmedicine.com/emergency/view/5-Minute_Emergency_Consult/307250/2.2/Delirium. Accessed June 13, 2026.
Delirium. (2020). In Schaider, J. J., Barkin, R. M., Hayden, S. R., Wolfe, R. E., Barkin, A. Z., Shayne, P., & Rosen, P. (Eds.), 5-Minute Emergency Consult (6th ed.). Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. https://emergency.unboundmedicine.com/emergency/view/5-Minute_Emergency_Consult/307250/2.2/Delirium
Delirium [Internet]. In: Schaider JJJ, Barkin RMR, Hayden SRS, et al, eds. 5-Minute Emergency Consult. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2020. [cited 2026 June 13]. Available from: https://emergency.unboundmedicine.com/emergency/view/5-Minute_Emergency_Consult/307250/2.2/Delirium.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - ELEC
T1 - Delirium
ID - 307250
ED - Barkin,Adam Z,
ED - Shayne,Philip,
ED - Rosen,Peter,
ED - Schaider,Jeffrey J,
ED - Barkin,Roger M,
ED - Hayden,Stephen R,
ED - Wolfe,Richard E,
BT - 5-Minute Emergency Consult
UR - https://emergency.unboundmedicine.com/emergency/view/5-Minute_Emergency_Consult/307250/2.2/Delirium
PB - Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
ET - 6
DB - Emergency Central
DP - Unbound Medicine
ER -

5-Minute Emergency Consult

