Prolonged activation EEG differentiates dementia with and without delirium in frail elderly patients

Objective: Delirium in the elderly results in increased morbidity, mortality and functional decline. Delirium is underdiagnosed, particularly in dementia. To increase diagnostic accuracy, we investigated whether maintenance of activation assessed by EEG discriminates delirium in association with dem...

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Main Authors: Thomas, Christine (Author) , Hestermann, Ute Marion (Author) , Walther, Stephan (Author) , Pfüller, Ute (Author) , Hack, Markus (Author) , Oster, Peter (Author) , Mundt, Christoph (Author) , Weisbrod, Matthias (Author)
Format: Article (Journal)
Language:English
Published: January 17, 2008
In: Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry
Year: 2008, Volume: 79, Issue: 2, Pages: 119-125
ISSN:1468-330X
DOI:10.1136/jnnp.2006.111732
Online Access:Verlag, Volltext: https://doi.org/10.1136/jnnp.2006.111732
Verlag: https://jnnp.bmj.com/content/79/2/119
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Author Notes:C. Thomas, U. Hestermann, S. Walther, U. Pfueller, M. Hack, P. Oster, C. Mundt, M. Weisbrod
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Summary:Objective: Delirium in the elderly results in increased morbidity, mortality and functional decline. Delirium is underdiagnosed, particularly in dementia. To increase diagnostic accuracy, we investigated whether maintenance of activation assessed by EEG discriminates delirium in association with dementia (D+D) from dementia without delirium (DP) and cognitively unimpaired elderly subjects (CU). - Method: Routine and quantitative EEG (rEEG/qEEG) with additional prolonged activation (3 min eyes open period) were evaluated in hospitalised elderly patients with acute geriatric disease. Patients were assigned post hoc to three comparable groups (D+D/DP/CU) by expert consensus based on DSM-IV criteria. Dementia diagnosis was confirmed using cognitive and functional tests and caregiver rating (IQCODE, Informed Questionnaire of Cognitive Decline in the Elderly). - Results: While rEEG at rest showed low accuracy for a diagnosis of delirium, qEEG in DP and CU revealed a specific activation pattern of high significance found to be absent in the D+D group. Stepwise logistic regression confirmed that differentiation of D+D from DP was best resolved using activated upper alpha and delta power density which, compared with rEEG, enabled an 11% increase in diagnostic correctness to 83%, resulting in 67% sensitivity and 91% specificity. Among frail CU and D+D subjects, almost 90% were correctly classified. - Conclusion: Dementia associated with delirium can be discriminated reliably from dementia alone in a meaningful clinical setting. Thus EEG evaluation in chronic encephalopathy should be optimised by a simple activation task and spectral analysis, particularly in the elderly with dementia.
Item Description:Gesehen am 23.11.2021
Physical Description:Online Resource
ISSN:1468-330X
DOI:10.1136/jnnp.2006.111732