Delirium in the intensive care unit is an acutely developed brain dysfunction affecting up to 80 % of patients. It is associated with significantly increased morbidity and mortality during admission and post-discharge. The mechanism behind the condition is poorly understood but assumably multifactorial, and the purpose of this study is to investigate the pathophysiology further.
The pathophysiology behind delirium in critical illness is not clarified but assumed to involve inflammation, changes in cerebral perfusion and neurotransmission, sleep deprivation and the use of i.e. sedatives. Cortical spreading depression is a phenomenon occuring in critically ill patients with acute cerebral trauma and likely associated with significant secondary neuron damage. The hypothesis is that 1. Delirium in critically ill patients without acute cerebral damage is a clinical manifestation of cortical spreading depression and can be recorded in a noninvasive direct current-electroencephalography 2. Electroencephalographic alterations or potentially specific signatures occur in delirium and thus, delirium can be predicted by recording continuous alternate current electroencephalography on admission in an ICU
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
102
Glostrup Hospital, University of Copenhagen
Glostrup Municipality, Denmark
The occurence of electroencephalographic alterations and potential electroencephalographic signatures prior to and during delirium in the ICU
Time frame: 7 days
The occurence of cortical spreading depression in noninvasive direct current-EEG in critically ill patients without acute cerebral trauma
Time frame: Cortical spreading depression in the ICU
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