collection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25803136/adjunctive-valproic-acid-in-management-refractory-hyperactive-delirium-a-case-series-and-rationale
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yelizaveta Sher, Anne Catherine Miller, Sermsak Lolak, Andrea Ament, José R Maldonado
Patients with delirium may fail to respond to standard therapies. Sixteen patients with management-refractory hyperactive delirium responded to adjunctive valproic acid, with complete resolution of hyperactive delirium in 13 cases. A rationale for using valproic acid in such circumstances is discussed.
2015: Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24149188/hepatic-encephalopathy-effects-of-liver-failure-on-brain-function
#2
REVIEW
Vicente Felipo
Liver failure affects brain function, leading to neurological and psychiatric alterations; such alterations are referred to as hepatic encephalopathy (HE). Early diagnosis of minimal HE reveals an unexpectedly high incidence of mild cognitive impairment and psychomotor slowing in patients with liver cirrhosis - conditions that have serious health, social and economic consequences. The mechanisms responsible for the neurological alterations in HE are beginning to emerge. New therapeutic strategies acting on specific targets in the brain (phosphodiesterase 5, type A GABA receptors, cyclooxygenase and mitogen-activated protein kinase p38) have been shown to restore cognitive and motor function in animal models of chronic HE, and NMDA receptor antagonists have been shown to increase survival in acute liver failure...
December 2013: Nature Reviews. Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18929943/pathoetiological-model-of-delirium-a-comprehensive-understanding-of-the-neurobiology-of-delirium-and-an-evidence-based-approach-to-prevention-and-treatment
#3
REVIEW
José R Maldonado
Delirium is the most common complication found in the general hospital setting. Yet, we know relatively little about its actual pathophysiology. This article contains a summary of what we know to date and how different proposed intrinsic and external factors may work together or by themselves to elicit the cascade of neurochemical events that leads to the development delirium. Given how devastating delirium can be, it is imperative that we better understand the causes and underlying pathophysiology. Elaborating a pathoetiology-based cohesive model to better grasp the basic mechanisms that mediate this syndrome will serve clinicians well in aspiring to find ways to correct these cascades, instituting rational treatment modalities, and developing effective preventive techniques...
October 2008: Critical Care Clinics
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