Delirium
SSRIs
Serotonin Syndrome
SSRIs 2
Serotonin Syndrom 2
100

The two main types of delirium.

What are hypo- and hyper- active? 

There is also a mixed. 

Hypoactive carries a poorer prognosis. 

100

SSRI with the longest and SSRI with the shortest half life.

What are fluoxetine and fluvoxamine?


Fluoxetine has a long elimination half-life, ranging from 1 to 3 days after a single dose and 4 to 6 days with chronic use. Its active metabolite, norfluoxetine, persists even longer, with a half-life of 7 to 16 days, causing significant accumulation in the body and requiring several weeks to fully clear after stopping the medication.


Paroxtine is a close second-shortest.

Fluvoxamine generally has an elimination half-life of 13–26 hours (often ~15-20h), while paroxetine typically has a half-life of 15–24 hours, though some data suggests around 21 hours. 





100

True or false: Tylenol is effective for SS related fever.

What is false? The origin is peripheral. 

100

These SSRIs are most likely to interfere with the metabolism of other drugs (e.g., Codeine or Warfarin) due to their inhibition of CYP2D6.

What are paroxetine and fluoxetine?

'Teens' like to interact. 

100

True or false: Serotonin syndrome presents more in the lower extremities than upper. 

What is true? 

200

True or false: Turn off the lights during the day so the delirious patient is not overstimulated and can rest.

What is false?

https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/medicine/articles/10.3389/fmed.2024.1403842/full

Patients did better with bright lights, cognitive stimulation. 

200

SSRI considered safest for a breastfeeding patient.

what is sertraline? 

200

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _  and _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ are the most common findings. 

What is hyperreflexia and myoclonus being the most common findings?

200

This SSRI is most notorious for causing gastrointestinal (GI) upset, such as diarrhea, often nicknamed "_______ squirts"

What is sertraline? 

200

Serotonin usually presents _ to _ _ hours after a change in serotonergic meds. 

Just knowing the general timeline is important. 

What is 6 to 24 hours? 


NMS often develops subacutely, within days to weeks.

300

True or false: One should always avoid benzos use in delirious patients.

What is false?

Forgetting about substance WD delirium, lorazepam can be used as an adjunct to haloperidol in severe agitation with some studies showing improvments without affecting length of stay or mortality. Still, maximize other agents first. 

300

True or false: SSRIs are generally considered to be free of movement disorder side effects like akathisia.

What is false?

SSRIs are associated with akathisia. Other EPS appear rarer. Oddly, escitalopram appears to be lower risk for akathisia; there are cases though. I do not know why. Bruxism and RLS are other motor SE. 

300

True or false: Serotonin syndrome is associated with an increased risk of DVT/PE. 

What is true? 

300

This SSRI is most associated with anticholinergic side effects (e.g., dry mouth, constipation) and sedation.

What is paroxetine? 

300

The _ _ _ _ _ _ Criteria are the most accurate for making a diagnosis. 

What are the Hunter Criteria? 

400

Haloperidol is still a drug of choice for agitation. It has been seen that, even in ill/elderly/ patients with limited cardiac risk, doses of < this no not require cardiac monitoring. 

What is 5mg? Even for IV. 

The point here is that you don't need to get the serial EKGs the medicine teams often get. 

400

This SSRI is considered "activating" and might be a good choice for a patient with low energy (hypersomnia) but could be poor choice for someone with high anxiety, causing jitteriness. 

What is fluoxetine? 

Sertraline is #2 here. 

400

All of the supporting signs/sx in the Hunter criteria require "movement": spontaneous or inducible or ocular myoclonus as a precursor to make the diagnosis of serotonin syndrome, except these two symptoms occurring together on their own. 

What are tremor and hyperreflexia? 

400

SSRI FDA approved for bulimia nervosa. 

What is fluoxetine? 

400

True or false: Dantrolene is effective for rigidity and fever in serotonin syndrome. 

What is false? 

Dantrolene is largely ineffective in serotonin syndrome because it directly acts on skeletal muscle calcium release, whereas serotonin syndrome is a central nervous system pathology driven by excess 5-HT, not primary peripheral muscle failure. It cannot reverse the central serotonergic toxicity. 

  • Mechanism Misalignment: Dantrolene relaxes muscles by blocking calcium release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (primarily used for Malignant Hyperthermia or Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome). In serotonin syndrome, the muscle contraction is driven by hyperexcitable alpha motor neurons in the spinal cord.


Serotonin (5-HT) acts as a complex modulator of body temperature within the central nervous system, primarily acting through the hypothalamus to either induce hyperthermia or hypothermia depending on the receptor subtype. It facilitates cold-defense mechanisms (shivering, thermogenesis) via 5-HT2 receptors and increases heat loss (vasodilation) or reduces heat production via 5-HT1A/5-HT3/5-HT7 receptors.

500

Considered a treatment of last resort for protracted delirium, especially with agitation that is difficult to control. 

What is ECT?

https://journals.lww.com/ectjournal/abstract/2016/03000/electroconvulsive_therapy_as_a_powerful_treatment.16.aspx

This is a case. There are some review papers. 

I would m/l try Prededex first:

https://associationofanaesthetists-publications.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/anae.14472

Initial loading dose of 1 mcg/kg over 10 minutes followed by an infusion of 0.2–0.7 mcg/kg/hour

500

If a patient has significant liver or kidney disease, these two SSRIs are preferred because their plasma levels rise in direct proportion to the dose (linear kinetics).

What are sertraline and citalopram?

Unlike fluoxetine or paroxetine, which can reach disproportionately high levels at higher doses, these two are easier to predict and manage in patients with impaired organ function.

500

This histamine-1 receptor antagonist with nonspecific 5-HT1A and 5-HT2A antagonistic properties is used when initial management with benzos is ineffective (Even though evidence is weak overall). 

What is cyproheptadine?

500

This SSRI is sedating, short acting, features a relatively elevated risk for interactions, and has a primary approval for and is generally used only in OCD. 

What is fluvoxamine? 

500

True or false: If you have an NMS v SS ddx, administer bromocriptine.

What is false? 

It is an agonist at 2 subtypes of 5HT1a receptors and 5HT2a as well.