Submitted:
22 December 2025
Posted:
23 December 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Epidemiology and Clinical Significance
2.1. Incidence and Prevalence
2.2. Clinical Outcomes and Long-Term Consequences
2.3. Healthcare Utilization and Economic Impact
3. Classification and Nomenclature
3.1. Historical Evolution of Terminology
3.2. Current Nomenclature Framework
- Postoperative Delirium (POD): An acute disturbance in attention and awareness that develops in the immediate postoperative period—typically within hours to days of surgery—and fluctuates over time. Delirium diagnosis relies on clinical criteria as defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5) [32]. The DSM-5 requires: (1) disturbance in attention and awareness, (2) development over a short period with fluctuation in severity, (3) additional disturbance in cognition, (4) disturbances not better explained by pre-existing neurocognitive disorder, and (5) evidence that the disturbance results from a medical condition, substance, or multiple etiologies.
- Delayed Neurocognitive Recovery: Cognitive decline identified within 30 days of surgery—but beyond the immediate acute delirium timeframe—through formal assessment. This category captures patients who demonstrate measurable cognitive impairment in the early postoperative period but do not meet criteria for delirium.
- Postoperative Neurocognitive Disorder (postoperative NCD): Cognitive decline persisting up to 12 months after surgery, identified through objective assessment relative to preoperative baseline. This term replaces the previous designation "POCD" and aligns with broader neurocognitive disorder nomenclature.
3.3. Relationship to Established Delirium and Neurocognitive Disorder Classifications
3.4. Clinical and Research Implications
4. Pathophysiology
4.1. Overview of Mechanisms
4.2. Neuroinflammation
4.3. Neurotransmitter Dysregulation
4.4. Cerebral Perfusion and Metabolism
4.5. Blood-Brain Barrier Dysfunction
4.6. Oxidative Stress and Cellular Dysfunction
4.7. Integration and Clinical Implications
5. Risk Factors and Assessment Tools
5.1. Risk Factor Categories
- Predisposing factors reflect baseline patient vulnerability. These include advanced age (particularly ≥70 years), pre-existing cognitive impairment or dementia, history of prior delirium, depression, sensory impairment (vision and hearing deficits), functional dependence, comorbidity burden, frailty, alcohol use disorder, and potentially genetic susceptibility factors [25,36]. Among these, age and baseline cognitive status emerge as the most consistent and robust predictors across studies.
- Precipitating factors relate to the surgical procedure and perioperative course. These include emergency surgery (versus elective), surgical complexity and duration, specific procedure types (with cardiac surgery, vascular surgery, and hip fracture repair conferring particularly high risk), intraoperative hypotension or hypoxemia, blood loss and transfusion requirements, metabolic derangements, infection, and pain [19,46]. The magnitude of surgical stress and physiologic perturbation generally correlates with PND risk.
- Modifiable perioperative factors represent potential intervention targets. These include medications (particularly anticholinergic agents, benzodiazepines, and certain analgesics), sleep deprivation, immobilization, dehydration, use of physical restraints, bladder catheterization, sensory deprivation (lack of eyeglasses or hearing aids), and environmental factors [25]. These factors are particularly important because they can be addressed through systematic prevention protocols.
5.2. Validated Risk Prediction Models
5.3. Clinical Assessment Tools for Delirium Detection
5.4. Cognitive Assessment Approaches
5.5. Biomarker Research
6. Prevention Strategies
6.1. Multicomponent Non-Pharmacological Interventions
6.2. Pharmacological Prevention
- Antipsychotics: Prophylactic administration of antipsychotic medications—including haloperidol, risperidone, and olanzapine—has been evaluated in multiple randomized trials. While some early studies suggested potential benefits, larger and more rigorous trials have generally failed to demonstrate reduced delirium incidence [64,65]. A 2016 Cochrane systematic review concluded that antipsychotics do not prevent delirium and may cause harm through adverse effects including extrapyramidal symptoms and oversedation [63]. Current guidelines recommend against routine antipsychotic prophylaxis.
- Cholinesterase Inhibitors: Given the cholinergic deficiency hypothesis of delirium, cholinesterase inhibitors (donepezil, rivastigmine) have been investigated for prevention. However, randomized trials have consistently failed to demonstrate efficacy and have raised safety concerns including increased bradycardia risk [66]. These agents are not recommended for delirium prevention.
- Alpha-2 Agonists: Dexmedetomidine, an alpha-2 adrenergic agonist with sedative and analgesic properties, has shown promise in some studies. A large randomized trial in elderly non-cardiac surgery patients demonstrated that prophylactic low-dose dexmedetomidine reduced delirium incidence (9% vs 23%, p<0.001) [67]. However, questions regarding optimal dosing, patient selection, timing, and safety—particularly cardiovascular effects—remain.
- Melatonin and Melatonin Receptor Agonists: Ramelteon, a melatonin receptor agonist, demonstrated delirium prevention efficacy in a Japanese randomized trial [71]. However, replication in other populations has been limited. Melatonin itself has shown promise in some observational studies but lacks definitive randomized controlled trial evidence. These agents warrant further investigation but are not currently recommended for routine prophylaxis.
- Other Agents: Various other pharmacological approaches—including antioxidants, anti-inflammatory agents, and neuroprotective compounds—have been investigated in preclinical models or small clinical studies, but robust evidence supporting clinical use is lacking.
6.3. Anesthetic Management Strategies
- Anesthetic Depth Monitoring: The hypothesis that deeper anesthesia increases neurocognitive risk has led to investigation of processed electroencephalogram (EEG) monitoring to guide anesthetic titration. Several randomized trials have evaluated whether maintaining lighter anesthesia—based on bispectral index or other EEG measures—reduces delirium or cognitive dysfunction compared to routine care [43,72].
- Regional Anesthesia: The hypothesis that regional anesthesia (spinal, epidural, or peripheral nerve blocks) might reduce PND risk compared to general anesthesia has been extensively investigated. The proposed mechanisms include avoiding general anesthetic agents' direct neurotoxic effects, reducing perioperative opioid requirements, and enabling earlier mobilization.
- Anesthetic Agent Selection: Whether choice of specific anesthetic agents influences PND risk remains uncertain. Some observational studies have suggested associations between volatile anesthetic exposure and increased cognitive dysfunction risk, while propofol-based total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA) has been proposed as potentially neuroprotective. However, randomized trials have not consistently demonstrated differences in neurocognitive outcomes between volatile agents and TIVA [75].
- Sedation Depth in Non-General Anesthesia Cases: For procedures performed under spinal anesthesia or monitored anesthesia care, sedation depth may influence delirium risk. The STRIDE randomized trial demonstrated that lighter sedation—targeting minimal to moderate sedation—during hip fracture repair under spinal anesthesia reduced delirium incidence compared to deeper sedation (13.4% vs 22.1%, p=0.04) [73]. This finding supports minimizing sedation depth when possible, particularly in high-risk patients.
6.4. Optimization of Perioperative Care Pathways
- Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) Protocols: ERAS pathways incorporate evidence-based interventions across the perioperative continuum, including preoperative patient optimization, minimally invasive surgical techniques, optimized anesthesia and analgesia, early mobilization, and early oral nutrition. While ERAS protocols were not designed specifically for PND prevention, several components directly address delirium risk factors. Studies evaluating ERAS implementation have demonstrated reduced delirium rates in some surgical populations, though specific effects are difficult to isolate from overall protocol benefits.
- Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment and Co-Management: Proactive geriatric consultation and co-management for high-risk elderly surgical patients represents another promising approach. Geriatricians can optimize medical management, address polypharmacy, identify and treat delirium promptly, and coordinate multidisciplinary care. Randomized trials of geriatric co-management for hip fracture patients have demonstrated reduced delirium duration and severity, though effects on incidence have been more variable [26].
- ICU Liberation (ABCDEF) Bundle: For critically ill surgical patients, the ICU Liberation bundle provides a systematic framework addressing multiple risk factors [76,77]. The bundle components include: Assess, prevent, and manage pain (A); Both spontaneous awakening and breathing trials (B); Choice of analgesia and sedation (C); Delirium assessment, prevention, and management (D); Early mobility and exercise (E); and Family engagement and empowerment (F). Implementation of the complete ABCDEF bundle has been associated with improved outcomes including reduced delirium, shorter mechanical ventilation duration, and decreased hospital mortality [77]. The bundle represents an important framework for systematic PND prevention in ICU settings, though implementation challenges remain substantial.
7. Management of Established Delirium
7.1. Recognition and Diagnostic Evaluation
- Comprehensive medication review: Identifying and discontinuing or minimizing deliriogenic medications including anticholinergics, benzodiazepines, antihistamines, and other psychoactive agents.
- Assessment for acute medical conditions: Systematic evaluation for infection (urinary tract infection, pneumonia, surgical site infection), metabolic derangements (hypoglycemia, hyperglycemia, electrolyte abnormalities, uremia), hypoxemia, hypotension, anemia, dehydration, urinary retention, and constipation.
- Pain assessment and management: Ensuring adequate analgesia while minimizing deliriogenic analgesics.
- Review of recent procedures and interventions: Considering iatrogenic contributions such as new medications, sleep disruption, immobilization, or sensory deprivation.
7.2. Non-Pharmacological Management
- Reorientation: Frequent reorientation to time, place, and situation using verbal reminders, calendars, clocks, and familiar objects from home.
- Cognitive stimulation: Engaging patients in conversation, reminiscence, and therapeutic activities appropriate to their cognitive level.
- Sleep-wake cycle regulation: Minimizing nighttime disruptions, providing daytime light exposure and activity, reducing noise and unnecessary monitoring, and establishing consistent sleep-wake schedules.
- Early mobilization: Encouraging out-of-bed activity and ambulation as soon as medically appropriate, with physical therapy consultation for high-risk patients.
- Sensory optimization: Ensuring availability and use of eyeglasses, hearing aids, and dentures; adequate lighting; and communication strategies for sensory-impaired patients.
- Family involvement: Encouraging family presence and participation in reorientation and therapeutic activities, with education regarding delirium nature and management.
- Environmental modification: Providing a calm, quiet environment with consistent caregivers when possible; minimizing room transfers; and avoiding physical restraints unless absolutely necessary for safety.
- Hydration and nutrition: Ensuring adequate fluid intake and nutritional support while respecting patient preferences and abilities.
7.3. Pharmacological Management
- Haloperidol: The most extensively studied antipsychotic for delirium, typically administered at low doses (0.5-1 mg). Caution is warranted due to QT prolongation risk and extrapyramidal effects.
- Atypical antipsychotics (risperidone, olanzapine, quetiapine): Sometimes preferred due to lower extrapyramidal symptom risk, though evidence of superiority is lacking. Metabolic and cardiovascular effects require monitoring.
- Benzodiazepines: Generally contraindicated for delirium management except in specific circumstances (alcohol or benzodiazepine withdrawal, seizures). Benzodiazepines can worsen delirium and should be avoided or minimized.
- Dexmedetomidine: May have a role in ICU settings for sedation of agitated delirious patients, particularly those requiring mechanical ventilation. Some studies suggest potential benefits over benzodiazepines or propofol, but evidence remains limited.
7.4. Management of Delirium Subtypes
8. Future Prospectives and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Term | Timing | Definition | Assessment Method |
| Postoperative Delirium (POD) | Acute (hours to days after surgery) | Acute disturbance in attention and awareness with fluctuating course, meeting DSM-5 criteria for delirium | Clinical assessment using validated tools (CAM, CAM-ICU, 4AT) |
| Delayed Neurocognitive Recovery | Up to 30 days postoperatively | Cognitive decline from preoperative baseline detected by objective assessment | Formal cognitive testing (neuropsychological battery or validated screening tools) |
| Postoperative Neurocognitive Disorder (Postoperative NCD) | Up to 12 months postoperatively | Persistent cognitive decline from preoperative baseline | Formal cognitive testing with documented functional impairment |
| Category | Risk Factors | Strength of Association |
| Predisposing (Patient) Factors | Advanced age (≥70 years) | Strong |
| Pre-existing cognitive impairment or dementia | Strong | |
| History of prior delirium | Strong | |
| Depression | Moderate | |
| Sensory impairment (vision/hearing) | Moderate | |
| Functional dependence | Moderate | |
| Frailty | Strong | |
| Comorbidity burden | Moderate | |
| Alcohol use disorder | Moderate | |
| Precipitating (Surgery/Anesthesia) Factors | Emergency surgery | Strong |
| Surgical complexity and duration | Moderate | |
| Type of surgery (cardiac, vascular, orthopedic) | Strong | |
| Intraoperative hypotension | Moderate | |
| Blood loss/transfusion | Moderate | |
| Metabolic derangements | Strong | |
| Modifiable Perioperative Factors | Anticholinergic medications | Strong |
| Benzodiazepines | Strong | |
| Opioid analgesics | Moderate | |
| Sleep deprivation | Moderate | |
| Immobilization | Moderate | |
| Dehydration | Moderate | |
| Physical restraints | Moderate | |
| Bladder catheterization | Moderate | |
| Lack of sensory aids (glasses, hearing aids) | Moderate |
| Tool | Setting | Administration Time | Key Features | Sensitivity | Specificity |
| Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) | General ward, surgical | 5-10 minutes | Requires: (1) Acute onset/fluctuation, (2) Inattention, (3) Disorganized thinking OR altered consciousness | 94-100% | 90-95% |
| Confusion Assessment Method for the Intensive Care Unit (CAM-ICU) | Intensive care unit | 2-5 minutes | Adapted for nonverbal patients; uses observational items and nonverbal attention tasks | 75-95% | 85-98% |
| 4AT | Any acute care setting | <2 minutes | Ultra-brief screening: Alertness, AMT4 (orientation), Attention (months backward), Acute change | 76-90% | 84-93% |
| Nursing Delirium Screening Scale (Nu-DESC) | Any acute care setting | 1-2 minutes | Nurse-administered observational tool; 5 items scored 0-2 | 85-95% | 80-87% |
| Delirium Rating Scale-Revised-98 (DRS-R-98) | Research, detailed assessment | 15-20 minutes | 13 severity items + 3 diagnostic items; tracks symptom evolution | Not applicable (severity scale) | Not applicable |
| Intervention Domain | Specific Interventions | Target Risk Factor |
| Cognitive Stimulation | Daily orientation (person, place, time, situation) Therapeutic activities (discussion, reminiscence) Cognitive games and puzzles |
Cognitive impairment |
| Sleep Enhancement | Nighttime noise reduction Minimizing nighttime care activities Daytime light exposure Avoiding sedative-hypnotics Warm drinks, relaxation music |
Sleep deprivation |
| Early Mobilization | Out-of-bed activity multiple times daily Ambulation or wheelchair mobility Range-of-motion exercises Physical therapy consultation |
Immobility |
| Vision/Hearing Optimization | Ensuring availability of eyeglasses Ensuring availability of hearing aids Visual/hearing adaptive equipment Communication strategies |
Sensory impairment |
| Hydration/Nutrition | Encouraging oral fluid intake Assistance with feeding Preferred foods and beverages Monitoring intake |
Dehydration |
| Medication Review | Discontinuing deliriogenic medications Minimizing psychoactive agents Avoiding anticholinergics and benzodiazepines Pain management with minimal sedation |
Medication adverse effects |
| Environmental Modification | Calm, quiet environment Consistent caregivers Familiar objects from home Minimizing room transfers Avoiding physical restraints |
Sensory deprivation<br>Disorientation |
| Family Engagement | Liberal visitation policies Family participation in reorientation Education regarding delirium Communication strategies |
Disorientation<br>Anxiety |
| Drug Class | Specific Agents | Proposed Mechanism | Evidence Quality | Efficacy | Current Recommendation |
| Antipsychotics | Haloperidol Risperidone Olanzapine |
Dopamine receptor antagonism | High (multiple RCTs, meta-analyses) | No benefit demonstrated; potential harm | Not recommended for routine prophylaxis |
| Cholinesterase Inhibitors | Donepezil Rivastigmine |
Enhance cholinergic transmission | Moderate (several RCTs) | No benefit; safety concerns (bradycardia) | Not recommended |
| Alpha-2 Agonists | Dexmedetomidine Clonidine |
Alpha-2 adrenergic agonism; sedative/analgesic effects | Moderate (several RCTs; mixed results) | Promising but inconsistent; questions regarding optimal dosing and safety | Further research needed; not routinely recommended |
| Melatonin Receptor Agonists | Ramelteon Melatonin |
Sleep-wake cycle regulation | Low (limited RCTs, single population) | Some positive findings; requires replication | Further research needed; not routinely recommended |
| Acetaminophen | Acetaminophen | Analgesia; anti-inflammatory | Low (few RCTs) | Inconsistent findings | Insufficient evidence |
| Ketamine | Ketamine (sub-anesthetic doses) | NMDA receptor antagonism; analgesia | Low (observational studies) | Preliminary positive signals | Experimental; requires RCTs |
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