Delirium is a confused or disorientated mental state. It's common for people who are nearing the end of their life.
It can come on quickly and can come and go during the day or the night. Delirium can produce problems with attention, awareness, thinking, memory, feelings or sleep.
Causes of delirium
There are many causes of delirium in palliative care and often there is more than one contributing factor.
Common causes include:
- unfamiliar environment in the hospital or hospice
- unrelieved and uncontrolled pain
- fatigue
- pressure sores due to immobility
- anxiety or depression
- organ failure such as liver or kidney failure
- brain metastases or leptomeningeal disease caused by cancer or its treatment
- high blood calcium or hypercalcemia
- dehydration
- biochemical abnormality such as low blood sugar, low blood sodium
- low oxygen in your blood (hypoxia)
- infection or sepsis
- medicines such as amitriptyline, opioids, steroids
- urinary retention (difficulty completely emptying your bladder)
- constipation
- withdrawal from drugs such as nicotine, opioids and alcohol
- prolonged seizures (status epilepticus).
Sometimes it has no causes, especially in the last weeks to hours of life.