Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing by Videbeck

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

522 Unit 4 NURSINGPRACTICE FORPSYCHIATRICDISORDERS



  • Moderate:Confusion is apparent along with
    progressive memory loss. The person no
    longer can perform complex tasks but
    remains oriented to person and place. He or
    she still recognizes familiar people. Toward
    the end of this stage, the person loses the
    ability to live independently and requires
    assistance because of disorientation to time
    and loss of information such as address and


telephone number. The person may remain
in the community if adequate caregiver
support is available, but some people move
to a supervised living situation.


  • Severe:Personality and emotional changes
    occur. The person may be delusional, wander
    at night, forget the names of his or her
    spouse and children, and require assistance
    in activities of daily living (ADLs). Most
    people live in a nursing facility when they
    reach this stage unless extraordinary
    community support is available.


Etiology
Causes vary although the clinical picture is similar
for most dementias. Often no definitive diagnosis can
be made until completion of a postmortem examina-
tion. Metabolic activity is decreased in the brains of
clients with dementia (Fig. 21-1); it is not known
whether dementia causes decreased metabolic activ-
ity or if decreased metabolic activity results in de-
mentia. A genetic component has been identified for
some dementias such as Huntington’s disease. An
abnormal APOE Gene is known to be linked with
Alzheimer’s disease. Other causes of dementia are
related to infections such as HIV or Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease.The most common types of dementia and their
known or hypothesized causes follow (APA, 2000;
Caine & Lyness, 2000; Small, 2000):


  • Alzheimer’s diseaseis a progressive brain
    disorder that has a gradual onset but causes
    an increasing decline in functioning includ-
    ing loss of speech, loss of motor function, and
    profound personality and behavioral changes


Multiple cognitive deficits of dementia.

Table 21-1
COMPARISON OFDELIRIUM ANDDEMENTIA
Indicator Delirium Dementia

Onset
Duration
Level of consciousness
Memory

Speech

Thought processes
Perception

Mood

Gradual and insidious
Progressive deterioration
Not affected
Short- then long-term memory impaired, eventu-
ally destroyed
Normal in early stage, progressive aphasia in later
stage
Impaired thinking, eventual loss of thinking abilities
Often absent, but can have paranoia, hallucina-
tions, illusions
Depressed and anxious in early stage, labile mood,
restless pacing, angry out-bursts in later stages

Rapid
Brief (hours to days)
Impaired, fluctuates
Short-term memory impaired

May be slurred, rambling,
pressured, irrelevant
Temporarily disorganized
Visual or tactile hallucinations,
delusions
Anxious, fearful if hallucinating;
weeping, irritable

Adapted from American Psychiatric Association. (2000). DSM-IV-TR: Diagnostic and statistical manual of
mental disorders(4th ed.). Washington, DC: APA, & Ribby, K. J., & Cox, K. R. (1996). Development, imple-
mentation, and evaluation of a confusion protocol. Clinical Nurse Specialist, 10(5), 241–247.

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