## Background: Advancing age is associated with high prevalence of both dementia and pain. dementia is frequently accompanied by distressing behavioral and psychological symptoms, including agitation and aggression, particularly in nursing home patients. the etiology of agitation is multifactorial.
Opioid treatment for agitation in patients with advanced dementia
β Scribed by Paolo L Manfredi; Brenda Breuer; Sylvan Wallenstein; Marian Stegmann; Gail Bottomley; Leslie Libow
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 66 KB
- Volume
- 18
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6230
- DOI
- 10.1002/gps.906
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Background
Some patients with advanced dementia cannot convey the experience of pain verbally and may react to pain with aggressive and agitated behaviors. We hypothesized that unrecognized pain could contribute to agitation and that low dose opioid therapy might reduce agitation by reducing pain. We therefore attempted to determine the effect of opioids on agitation in demented patients.
Methods
We administered placebo for 4 weeks and a longβacting opioid for another 4 weeks to nursing home patients with advanced dementia and severe agitation despite treatment with psychotropic drugs. Patients and study nurses did not know if the medication administered was placebo or opioid. We measured the CohenβMansfield Agitation Inventory (CMAI) score at baseline and every two weeks.
Results
Among 47 patients who entered the study, 25 completed the two phases. The median age for the 25 patients was 85.5 years. Analyses of the data of these 25 patients and of the patients <85 yearsβold showed no significant differences in agitation level between the placebo and opioid phases. However, among the 13 patients who completed the study and were β₯85 years old, the agitation level at the end of the opioid phase was significantly lower than at the end of the placebo phase (mean change in CMAI score: β6.4; 95% confidence interval (CI): β10.96, β1.8). The decrease in agitation in the patients β₯85 years old persisted after adjusting for sedation. The results remained unchanged when we expanded the analyses to include four β₯85 patients who dropped out of the study after the second week of the opioid phase.
Conclusion
Low dose, longβacting opioids can lessen agitation that is difficult to control in very old (β₯85) patients with advanced dementia. Copyright Β© 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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