J-Slides Module 6
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Transcript J-Slides Module 6
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The Project to Educate Physicians on End-of-life Care
Supported by the American Medical Association and
the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Module 6
Depression,
Anxiety, Delirium
Objectives
Identify depression, anxiety, delirium
near end of life
Describe management plans
Depression, anxiety,
delirium
Highly prevalent, under-diagnosed
May prevent quality dying
Effective management is possible
Depression
25%–77% of patients
Intense suffering
Not inevitable
Treatable in most cases
Early treatment is better
Risk factors . . .
Pain, other symptoms
Progressive physical impairment
Advanced disease
Medications
steroids
benzodiazepines
. . . Risk factors
Particular diseases
pancreatic cancer
stroke
Spiritual pain
Preexisting risk factors
prior Hx, family Hx, social stress
suicide attempts, substance use
Diagnosing depression in
advanced illness
Somatic symptoms always present
Look for psychological, cognitive
symptoms
pain not responding as expected
sad mood / flat affect, anxious, irritable
worthlessness, hopelessness,
helplessness, guilt, despair
anhedonia, lost self-esteem
Suicide
Assess all depressed patients for
risk
Discussion of thoughts of suicide
may reduce the risk
Suicidal thoughts a sign of
depression
High risk if recurrent thoughts, plans
Management of
depression
Psychotherapeutic interventions
cognitive approaches
behavioral interventions
Medications
Combination of psychotherapy,
medication
Counseling goals . . .
Weave counseling into routine
interventions
include family when possible
Improve patient understanding
Create a different perspective
Identify strengths, coping strategies
. . . Counseling goals
Reestablish self-worth
New coping strategies
Educate about modifiable factors
Pharmacologic
management . . .
Psychostimulants
SSRIs
Tricyclic and atypical
antidepressants
. . . Pharmacologic
management
Choose by time to effect
days – psychostimulants
weeks / months – SSRIs, tricyclic /
atypical antidepressants
Start dosing low, titrate slowly
Consider consultation
Psychostimulants . . .
Rapid effect
Methylphenidate, 5 mg q am + q
noon, titrate to effect
Alone or in combination
Continue indefinitely
. . . Psychostimulants
Diminish opioid sedation
Not usually an appetite suppressant
May exacerbate
tremulousness
anxiety
anorexia
insomnia
SSRIs
Latency 2–4 weeks
Highly effective (70%)
Well tolerated
Once-daily dosing
Low doses may be effective in
advanced illness
Tricyclic antidepressants
Not recommended as first-line
therapy
Latency 3–6 weeks
Adverse effects are common
nortriptyline, desipramine have fewer
adverse effects
Atypical antidepressants still being
studied
Anxiety . . .
Fear, uncertainty about future
Physical, psychological, social,
spiritual, practical issues
Presentation
agitation, insomnia, restlessness,
sweating, tachycardia, hyperventilation,
panic disorder, worry, tension
. . . Anxiety
Assessment complex
Differentiate from
delirium, depression
bipolar disorder
medication effects
insomnia
alcohol, caffeine
Management of anxiety
Counseling, supportive therapy
Benzodiazepines
short vs long half-life
diazepam
lorazepam
alprazolam, oxazepam
Atypical antidepressants
Delirium
Global change in cognition,
awareness, acute onset
Presentation
fluctuating level of consciousness
cognitive impairment
distinguish from dementia, depression,
anxiety
Causes to consider . . .
Infections, sepsis
Medications, street drugs (including
withdrawal)
Hypoxemia
Metabolic
. . . Causes to consider
Vitamin deficiencies
Fecal impaction, urinary retention
Renal, hepatic failure
Tumor burden, secretions
Changes in environment
Medical management
Neuroleptics
haloperidol
chlorpromazine
Atypical neuroleptics
risperidone
olanzepine
Benzodiazepines for acute agitation
Terminal delirium
Day-night reversal
Agitation, restlessness
Moaning, groaning
Evaluate treatment
Monitor carefully
If negligible or partial response
reevaluate diagnosis
inquire about adherence to medication
consider dosage adjustment
consider a different medication
refer to a specialist
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Depression,
Anxiety, Delirium
Summary