Excited Delirium, Restraints, and Unexpected Death: A Review of Pathogenesis
@article{Otahbachi2010ExcitedDR,
title={Excited Delirium, Restraints, and Unexpected Death: A Review of Pathogenesis},
author={Mohammad Otahbachi and Cihan Çevik and Satish Bagdure and Kenneth M. Nugent},
journal={The American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology},
year={2010},
volume={31},
pages={107-112}
}Unexpected deaths periodically occur in individuals held in police custody. These decedents usually have had significant physical exertion associated with violent and/or bizarre behavior, have been restrained by the police, and often have drug intoxication. Autopsy material from these cases may not provide a satisfactory explanation for the cause of death, and these deaths are then attributed to the excited delirium syndrome. The pathogenesis of excited delirium deaths is likely multifactorial…
Topics from this paper
67 Citations
The syndrome of excited delirium
- Medicine, PsychologyForensic Science, Medicine, and Pathology
- 2014
The main goal of the autopsy of deaths suspected to be due to EDS is to identify (or exclude) intervening diseases or injuries sufficient to explain the death in the context of the investigated circumstances.
Excited delirium: A psychiatric review
- Psychology, MedicineMedicine, science, and the law
- 2016
It would be helpful for forensic pathologists and psychiatrists to develop a mutually agreed terminology for the term ‘excited delirium’, which has different meanings for psychiatrists and for pathologists.
Assessing the symptoms associated with excited delirium syndrome and the use of conducted energy weapons
- Psychology, MedicineForesic Research & Criminology International Journal
- 2018
Excited delirium syndrome (ExDS) has been defined as the sudden death of an individual involving an acute (minutes to hours) transient disturbance in consciousness and cognition, marked by…
Arrest-related death on the basis of a drug-induced excited delirium syndrome.
- Medicine, PsychologyJournal of forensic and legal medicine
- 2020
Excited Delirium Syndrome: Diagnosis and Treatment
- Medicine, Psychology
- 2021
Knowledge of this condition is significant for individuals who take care of patients in the acute setting, both in and out of the hospital, including law enforcement officers, emergency medical system (EMS) providers, critical care psychiatrists, and emergency physicians.
Excited delirium syndrome (ExDS): treatment options and considerations.
- Medicine, PsychologyJournal of forensic and legal medicine
- 2012
Restraint-related asphyxia on the basis of a drug-induced excited delirium.
- Medicine, PsychologyForensic science international
- 2018
[Sudden deaths by hobble restraint of severely hyperactive persons].
- Medicine, PsychologyUgeskrift for laeger
- 2012
Some of the sudden deaths are associated with excited delirium syndrome (EDS), an acute condition characterized by a hyperactive, combative behaviour in individuals, who are influenced by psychoactive drugs or suffer from psychiatric illness.
Sudden cardiac death with stress and restraint: The association with sudden adult death syndrome, cardiomyopathy and coronary artery disease
- MedicineMedicine, science, and the law
- 2016
This study highlights the rare but important risk of SCD associated with psychological stress and restraint in morphologically normal hearts and the importance of an expert cardiac opinion where prolonged criminal investigations and medico-legal issues often ensue.
References
SHOWING 1-10 OF 38 REFERENCES
Excited delirium: does it exist?
- Psychology, MedicinePerspectives in psychiatric care
- 2003
There is a great deal of controversy regarding the use of this syndrome to explain sudden death while restrained, and opponents of excited delirium theory say they have never seen any proof that someone can be excited to death.
Factors associated with sudden death of individuals requiring restraint for excited delirium.
- Medicine, PsychologyThe American journal of emergency medicine
- 2001
It is indicated that unexpected sudden death when excited delirium victims are restrained in the out-of-hospital setting is not infrequent and can be associated with multiple predictable but usually uncontrollable factors.
Unexpected death related to restraint for excited delirium: a retrospective study of deaths in police custody and in the community.
- Psychology, MedicineCMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne
- 1998
The frequency of physical restraint among people in a state of excited delirium who died unexpectedly and the deaths were associated with restraint, with the person either in a prone position or subjected to pressure on the neck, is determined.
Acute excited states and sudden death
- Psychology, MedicineBMJ
- 1997
Excited delirium is a state of mental and physiological arousal, agitation, hyperpyrexia with epiphora, and hostility commonly associated with high blood concentrations of cocaine or other stimulants, though some cases arise in those with histories of schizophrenia or mania and no evidence of intoxication.
Fatal excited delirium following cocaine use: epidemiologic findings provide new evidence for mechanisms of cocaine toxicity.
- Psychology, MedicineJournal of forensic sciences
- 1997
The epidemiologic findings are most consistent with the hypothesis that chronic cocaine use disrupts dopaminergic function and, when coupled with recent cocaine use, may precipitate agitation, delirium, aberrant thermoregulation, rhabdomyolysis, and sudden death.
Factors associated with excited delirium deaths in police custody.
- Law, PsychologyModern pathology : an official journal of the United States and Canadian Academy of Pathology, Inc
- 1998
From medical, legal, and police documents, 61 cases of excited delirium decedents in police custody between 1988 and 1997 are analyzed, and in a majority of cases, acute cocaine toxicity and physical restraint inPolice custody were contributory to death.
Neurohumoral features of myocardial stunning due to sudden emotional stress.
- MedicineThe New England journal of medicine
- 2005
Emotional stress can precipitate severe, reversible left ventricular dysfunction in patients without coronary disease andaggerated sympathetic stimulation is probably central to the cause of this syndrome.
Excited Delirium Syndrome: Cause of Death and Prevention
- Medicine, Psychology
- 2005
Information is provided on how to identify patients Susceptible to Excited Delirium Syndrome and prevent Sudden Death from Excited delirium syndrome in patients diagnosed with this condition.
Death in Custody: A Historical Analysis *
- MedicineJournal of forensic sciences
- 2007
A retrospective, exploratory analysis of 145,425 cases from Maryland’s Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, occurring from 1939 to 2004, indicates that there have been substantive changes in custodial deaths over time.
Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy, or Broken-Heart Syndrome
- MedicineThe Annals of pharmacotherapy
- 2010
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy causes a reversible left ventricle dysfunction which occurs most commonly in postmenopausal women with or without cardiovascular disease and is thought to primarily be due to an abnormally high sympathetic stimulation after emotional or psychological stress.