Delirium in the ICU
1. Definition
ICU delirium is an acute, fluctuating disturbance of consciousness and cognition, characterized by:
- Impaired attention
- Altered level of awareness
- Disorganized thinking ± perceptual disturbances
It develops over hours to days and is a manifestation of acute brain dysfunction.
2. Why ICU Delirium Matters
- Incidence: 30–80% of ICU patients (highest in ventilated, septic, elderly)
- Associated with:
- ↑ Mortality (short- and long-term)
- ↑ Duration of mechanical ventilation
- ↑ ICU & hospital LOS
- ↑ Long-term cognitive impairment (ICU-acquired dementia–like syndrome)
# Delirium is NOT benign and NOT just agitation.
3. Pathophysiology
3.1 Neurotransmitter Imbalance
- ↓ Acetylcholine
- ↑ Dopamine
- Altered GABA, serotonin, glutamate
3.2 Neuroinflammation
- Sepsis → cytokines (IL-1, IL-6, TNF-α)
- Blood–brain barrier dysfunction
3.3 Cerebral Hypoperfusion & Hypoxia
- Shock, anemia, respiratory failure
3.4 Stress Response
- ↑ Cortisol, catecholamines
3.5 Iatrogenic Factors
- Benzodiazepines
- Anticholinergics
- Opioids (especially meperidine)
4. Subtypes of ICU Delirium
|
Subtype |
Features |
Prognosis |
|
Hyperactive |
Agitation, restlessness, hallucinations |
Easily recognized |
|
Hypoactive |
Lethargy, withdrawal, ↓ responsiveness |
Most common, most missed, worse prognosis |
|
Mixed |
Alternating features |
Common |
# Hypoactive delirium ≠ depression or fatigue
5. Risk Factors (Mnemonic: “DELIRIUM”)
Predisposing
- Advanced age
- Dementia, prior cognitive impairment
- Alcohol use disorder
- Sensory impairment
Precipitating
- Sepsis
- Mechanical ventilation
- Benzodiazepines
- Deep sedation
- Sleep deprivation
- Metabolic derangements
- Organ failure (hepatic, renal)
6. Diagnosis: Routine Screening is Mandatory
6.1 CAM-ICU (Gold Standard)
Diagnosis requires Feature 1 + Feature 2 + (Feature 3 or 4)
- Acute onset or fluctuating course
- Inattention
- Disorganized thinking
- Altered level of consciousness
✔ Validated in intubated & non-verbal patients
✔ Takes <2 minutes
✔ Recommended by SCCM / PADIS guidelines
6.2 Other Tools
- ICDSC (score ≥4 = delirium)
- DSM-5 (diagnostic standard, impractical in ICU)
7. Differential Diagnosis
|
Condition |
Key Difference |
|
Dementia |
Chronic, non-fluctuating |
|
Depression |
Attention usually intact |
|
Psychosis |
Consciousness preserved |
|
Sedation |
Improves on stopping sedatives |
|
Non-convulsive status epilepticus |
EEG required |
8. Management: PREVENTION > TREATMENT
8.1 Non-Pharmacological
ABCDEF Bundle
- A: Assess & manage pain
- B: Both SAT & SBT
- C: Choice of analgesia/sedation
- D: Delirium assessment & prevention
- E: Early mobilization
- F: Family engagement
Other Measures:
- Reorientation (clocks, calendars)
- Sleep promotion (lights off, noise reduction)
- Correct vision/hearing
- Hydration & nutrition
9. Sedation Strategy
|
Preferred |
Avoid |
|
Dexmedetomidine |
Benzodiazepines |
|
Light sedation (RASS −1 to 0) |
Deep continuous sedation |
|
Daily sedation interruption |
Unnecessary restraints |
# Benzodiazepines are an independent risk factor for delirium
10. Pharmacological Treatment
10.1 Antipsychotics
- Haloperidol: for severe agitation threatening safety
- Atypicals: quetiapine, olanzapine (symptom control)
# Do NOT prevent delirium
# Do NOT reduce mortality
# Monitor QTc, extrapyramidal effects
10.2 Dexmedetomidine
- Useful when agitation prevents extubation
- Preferred sedative in delirious ventilated patients
11. Delirium in Special ICU Situations
Sepsis
- Often first sign of sepsis-associated encephalopathy
Post-operative ICU
- Elderly, major surgery → high risk
Alcohol Withdrawal
- Delirium tremens ≠ ICU delirium
- Benzodiazepines indicated only here
12. Prognosis & Long-Term Outcomes
- Delirium duration correlates with:
- Long-term cognitive decline
- Reduced quality of life
- Each additional delirium day → ↑ mortality risk
13. Exam
- Hypoactive delirium is most common
- Routine screening is mandatory
- Prevention is more effective than drugs
- Benzodiazepines worsen delirium
- Antipsychotics do NOT improve survival

