PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Investigating speech and language impairments in delirium: A preliminary case-control study.

  • Samantha Green,
  • Satu Reivonen,
  • Lisa-Marie Rutter,
  • Eva Nouzova,
  • Nikki Duncan,
  • Caoimhe Clarke,
  • Alasdair M J MacLullich,
  • Zoë Tieges

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207527
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 11
p. e0207527

Abstract

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IntroductionLanguage impairment is recognized as as part of the delirium syndrome, yet there is little neuropsychological research on the nature of this dysfunction. Here we hypothesized that patients with delirium show impairments in language formation, coherence and comprehension.MethodsThis was a case-control study in 45 hospitalized patients (aged 65-97 years) with delirium, dementia without delirium, or no cognitive impairment (N = 15 per group). DSM-5 criteria were used for delirium. Speech was elicited during (1) structured conversational questioning, and (2) the "Cookie Theft" picture description task. Language comprehension was assessed through standardized verbal and written commands. Interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed.ResultsDelirium and dementia groups scored lower on the conversational assessment than the control group (pConclusionsProduction of spontaneous speech, word quantity, speech content and verbal and written language comprehension are impaired in delirious patients compared to cognitively unimpaired patients. Additionally, patients with delirium produced significantly less fluent speech than those with dementia. These findings have implications for how speech and language are evaluated in delirium assessments, and also for communication with patients with delirium. A study limitation was that the delirium group included patients with co-morbid dementia, which precludes drawing conclusions about the specific language profile of delirium.