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Observations placeholder

Acute delirium induced by metoprolol in 24 people

Identifier

012268

Type of Spiritual Experience

Hallucination

Number of hallucinations: 7

Background

A description of the experience

Cardiovasc Drugs Ther. 2002 Mar;16(2):161-5.

Acute delirium induced by metoprolol.

Fisher AA1, Davis M, Jeffery I.  1Department of Geriatric Medicine, The Canberra Hospital, The Canberra Clinical School of the University of Sydney, Canberra, Australia.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe a case of delirium associated with use of metoprolol and to analyse 24 such cases including 22 cases reported to Australian Adverse Drug Reaction Advisory Committee and one case previously published (S. Ahmad, Am Fam Physician, 1991;44:1142, 1144).

CASE SUMMARY: An 89 year old caucasian man with an acute coronary syndrome who had no psychiatric history and no infections, brain injury, stroke, metabolic nor neoplastic disease developed delirium after two small doses of metoprolol (25 mg). The delirium disappeared within 20 hours after metoprolol was ceased, despite continuing all other medications.

THE COMBINED SERIES: Of 24 patients (12 women, mean age 71.8 years), 83% were older than 60 years. The duration of therapy before onset of delirium in 14 (58%) subjects was within one week; 23 of 24 patients were receiving therapeutic amounts of the drug (25-200 mg/day). Clinical features included confusion/disorientation in all subjects, agitation in 13, aggression in 6, visual hallucinations in 7, auditory hallucinations in 1, paranoid delusions in 3, vivid dreams in 2 and language disturbances in 3 persons. Bradycardia was reported in 4 cases, hypotension in 2, fatigue/tiredness in 3, Raynaud's phenomenon in 1 and skin rash in 1 patient.

DISCUSSION:  The mechanism of metoprolol-induced delirium is unclear. It could be due to impairment of hepatic metabolism (especially in the ageing liver) and complex neurotransmitter-related effects on brain beta-adrenoceptors and serotonin (5-HT) receptors.

CONCLUSIONS:  Physicians should be aware that metoprolol, a widely used beta-blocker, may cause delirium, especially in the elderly population.

PMID:  12090909

The source of the experience

PubMed

Concepts, symbols and science items

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Symbols

Science Items

Activities and commonsteps

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References