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RECRUITING
NCT06326424

Delirium Identification in Older Patients With Alzheimer's and Other Related Dementias In the Emergency Department

Sponsor: Ohio State University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Delirium is highly prevalent and very bad for patients with dementia. Delirium is a dangerous medical condition that occurs in 6-38% of older Emergency Department patients and 70% of ICU patients. A person who develops delirium in the ED or hospital has a 12 times higher odds of being newly diagnosed with dementia in the next year compared to a similar patient who does not become delirious. Delirium is especially dangerous for persons living with Alzheimer Disease and Related Dementias (AD/ADRD). Persons living with ADRD have an almost 50% chance of developing delirium in the hospital. Clinicians are bad at recognizing delirium. A recent systematic review led by the Geriatric Emergency Care Applied Research network (NIH funded) found that current delirium screening tools are at most 64% sensitive, meaning that physicians can identify some phenotypes of delirium well, but cannot easily rule out delirium in acutely ill older patients. The investigators propose integrating wrist biosensors into the emergency management of older adults with dementia. The investigators will monitor heart rate variability, movement, and electrodermal activity (electrical activity of at the level of the skin) to determine if an array of biosensors more sensitive to delirium than current verbal screening tools.

Official title: Delirium Identification in Older Patients With Alzheimer's and Other Related Dementias In the Emergency Department Using Wrist Accelerometer Biosensors and Machine Learning

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

65 Years - Any

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

60

Start Date

2024-04-10

Completion Date

2026-03-01

Last Updated

2025-04-03

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DEVICE

Empatica EmbracePlus

wear a biosensor watch to passively collect biosensor data over 48 hours. The EmbracePlus will collect heart rate variability, accelerometry, and electrodermal activity.

Locations (1)

The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center

Columbus, Ohio, United States