## Correct Answer: C. Delirium The **Confusion Assessment Method (CAM)** is a validated, rapid screening tool specifically designed for **delirium** detection in clinical settings. Delirium is an acute, fluctuating state of altered consciousness with inattention and disorganized thinking—hallmark features that CAM captures through its four diagnostic criteria: (1) acute onset and fluctuating course, (2) inattention, (3) disorganized thinking, and (4) altered level of consciousness. In Indian hospital practice, CAM is widely used in ICUs, medical wards, and geriatric units to identify delirium early, especially in postoperative patients, sepsis, and those on psychoactive drugs. The tool's strength lies in its ability to distinguish delirium (a medical emergency requiring urgent investigation for underlying causes like infection, metabolic derangement, or hypoxia) from other psychiatric conditions. CAM has high sensitivity (94–100%) and specificity (90–95%) for delirium detection, making it the gold standard screening instrument. Unlike dementia (chronic, progressive), schizophrenia (primary psychotic disorder), or depression (mood disorder), delirium is an acute organic mental syndrome requiring immediate medical intervention—and CAM is purpose-built for this distinction. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Dementia** — Dementia is a chronic, progressive neurodegenerative disorder with insidious onset and stable consciousness. CAM is not designed for dementia screening; instead, tools like **MMSE** or **MoCA** assess cognitive decline over months to years. The acute fluctuation and inattention that CAM detects are absent in pure dementia. However, delirium superimposed on dementia (delirium superimposed on dementia, or DSD) is common in Indian elderly patients and requires CAM to identify the acute component. **B. Schizophrenia** — Schizophrenia is a primary psychotic disorder with hallucinations, delusions, and negative symptoms, but **normal consciousness and attention** (unless complicated by catatonia or acute agitation). CAM's focus on acute fluctuation, inattention, and disorganized thinking due to organic causes does not apply. Schizophrenia requires **PANSS** or clinical DSM-5 criteria, not CAM. NBE may pair schizophrenia here to test whether students confuse acute psychotic symptoms with delirium. **D. Depression** — Depression is a mood disorder with depressed affect, anhedonia, and psychomotor changes, but **preserved consciousness and attention** (except in severe psychotic depression). CAM does not screen for mood disorders; **PHQ-9** or **HAM-D** are appropriate tools. Delirium may present with depressed mood or apathy, but the acute fluctuation and inattention are the discriminating features that CAM targets, not mood symptoms. ## High-Yield Facts - **CAM (Confusion Assessment Method)** has four criteria: acute onset + fluctuating course, inattention, disorganized thinking, altered consciousness—all present in delirium, absent in dementia/schizophrenia/depression. - **Delirium** is an acute organic mental syndrome requiring urgent medical workup (infection, metabolic, hypoxia, drugs); CAM detects it in minutes, making it ideal for ICU and ward screening in Indian hospitals. - **CAM sensitivity 94–100%, specificity 90–95%**—highest accuracy among bedside delirium tools; outperforms clinical judgment alone in identifying delirium in postoperative and septic patients. - **Delirium superimposed on dementia (DSD)** is common in Indian elderly; CAM helps identify the acute delirium component requiring intervention, even when baseline dementia is present. - **CAM-ICU** is the validated version for mechanically ventilated ICU patients; widely adopted in Indian tertiary care for detecting delirium in sedated patients. ## Mnemonics **CAM = Acute + Attention + Altered (AAA)** Delirium = **A**cute onset, **A**ttention deficit, **A**ltered consciousness. CAM screens for these three core features in minutes. Use this when you see 'Confusion Assessment Method' in any question. **DELIRIUM vs. DEMENTIA (D-D rule)** **D**elirium = **D**ays (acute, fluctuating). **D**ementia = **D**ecades (chronic, stable). CAM catches delirium; MMSE/MoCA catch dementia. This separates the two in exam questions. ## NBE Trap NBE may pair CAM with dementia to test whether students confuse acute confusion (delirium, which CAM detects) with chronic cognitive decline (dementia, which CAM does not). The trap is assuming any 'confusion' tool applies to any 'confused' patient—but CAM's specificity for acute, fluctuating, inattentive delirium is the key discriminator. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian ICUs and postoperative wards, a septic or hypoxic patient may appear 'confused'—but CAM in 2 minutes confirms delirium, triggering urgent investigation for infection or metabolic cause. Without CAM, delirium is missed 50% of the time, delaying life-saving treatment. This is why CAM is now standard in Indian hospital protocols for high-risk patients. _Reference: Harrison Ch. 41 (Delirium and Dementia); Kaplan & Sadock's Synopsis of Psychiatry (Delirium, Dementia, and Amnestic and Other Cognitive Disorders)_
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