Postoperative delirium or psychosis occurs in 41% to 70% of patients following open-heart surgery, with predisposing factors including illness severity, physical stress, and environmental circumstances.
A MAIN focus of interest in relation to open-heart surgery has been the reputedly high incidence of delirium or psychosis characterized by perceptual distortion, hallucinations, and paranoid ideation occurring two to five days following surgery. Egerton and Kay1reported a 41% incidence of postoperative delirium, and Blachly and Starr,257%. Kornfeld et al3found a similar incidence in reviewing their records, but when they personally interviewed a sample of their patients they raised their estimate of the incidence of postoperative delirium to 70%. Predisposing factors which statistically are more frequent in the patients developing delirium are seriousness of illness preoperatively,2degree of physical stress during surgery,2and environmental circumstances such as marital instability, overwhelming personal problems, and a lack of positive interpersonal support during hospitalization.1However, there appears to be increasing evidence pointing toward the
Harold Gilberstadt (Wed,) conducted a review in Open-heart surgery. Open-heart surgery was evaluated on Postoperative delirium or psychosis. Postoperative delirium or psychosis occurs in 41% to 70% of patients following open-heart surgery, with predisposing factors including illness severity, physical stress, and environmental circumstances.