A systematic review of neuroimaging in delirium

Anita Nitchingham, Varun Kumar, Susan Shenkin, Karen Ferguson, Gideon A Caplan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective: Neuroimaging advances our understanding of delirium pathophysiology and its consequences. A previous systematic review identified 12 studies (total participants N=764, delirium cases N=194; years 1989–2007) and found associations with white matter hyperintensities (WMH) and cerebral atrophy. Our objectives were to perform an updated systematic review of neuroimaging studies in delirium published since Jan 2006 and summarise the available literature on predictors, correlates, or outcomes.
Methods: Studies were identified by keyword and MeSH-based electronic searches of EMBASE, MEDLINE and PsycINFO combining terms for neuroimaging, brain structure and delirium. We included neuroimaging studies of delirium in adults using validated delirium assessment methods.
Results: Thirty-two studies (total N=3187, delirium N=1086) met the inclusion criteria. Imaging included magnetic resonance imaging (MRI; N=9), computed tomography (N=4), diffusion tensor imaging (N=3), transcranial doppler (N=5), Near Infra-red spectroscopy (N=5), functional-MRI (N=2), single photon emission computed tomography (N=1), proton MRI spectroscopy (N=1), arterial spin labelling MRI (N=1) and 2-13fluoro-2-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography (N=1). Despite heterogeneity in study design, delirium was associated with WMH, lower brain volume, atrophy, dysconnectivity, impaired cerebral autoregulation, reduced blood flow and cerebral oxygenation and glucose hypometabolism. There was evidence of long-term brain changes following ICU delirium.
Conclusions: Neuroimaging is now used more widely in delirium research due to advances in technology. However, imaging delirious patients presents challenges leading to methodological limitations and restricted generalisability. The findings that atrophy and WMH burden predict delirium replicates findings from the original review, while advanced techniques have identified other substrates and mechanisms that warrant further investigation.
Original languageEnglish
JournalInternational Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry
Early online date2 Jun 2017
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 2 Jun 2017

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