Clinical Trial: Wearable Sensors for Delirium Detection at an Early Stage (WeSen_delirium)

Study Status: RECRUITING
Recruit Status: RECRUITING
Study Type: OBSERVATIONAL




Official Title: Wearable Sensors for Delirium Detection at an Early Stage (WeSen_delirium) - an Exploratory Study

Brief Summary:

Delirium is an acute brain-organic syndrome: its clinical manifestation and form are results of a highly complex pathophysiology.
Delirium is a serious clinical problem in hospitalized adults.
It is the most common neuropsychiatric complication of hospitalization and is associated with high patient burden, increased morbidity and mortality, prolonged length of stay, higher costs, and institutionalization.

An early, accurate diagnosis as well as an adequate management are critical to the continued health and functional independence of the affected patients.
Prevention strategies contain pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions.
However, their clinical success (effectiveness) is limited and the evidence for the use of pharmacological interventions for the prevention or management of delirium is scarce.

The prediction of delirium has become a new promising topic in clinical research.
New approaches like the implementation of wearable sensors, in particular wearable accelerometer devices to record movements related to delirium are promising.

In this study, the study procedure only includes wearing two types of consumer-grade sensors on the body (wrist and finger of the not-dominant hand).

This way, vital parameters are measured in order to identify patterns.