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[Terminal care for elderly patients with dementia in two long-term care hospitals].

A byproduct of the aging of the population has been a dramatic rise in patients with dementia. The aim of the present study is to clarify the use of aggressive and palliative treatments, artificial nutrition and sedation in long-term care hospitals in Japan. We assessed 123 deaths in people aged 65 and older who died in two long-term care hospitals in and around Nagoya from January 2001 to December 2002. All deceased were divided into two groups according to their diagnosis of dementia. Data on the particular characteristics of the deceased, diagnosis of dementia, aggressive treatments (including CPR, intubation, mechanical ventilation, the use of systemic antibiotics and blood transfusion), palliative treatments (including oxygen, narcotic and nonnarcotic pain medication) artificial nutrition (including hyperalimentation and tube feeding) and sedation during the last six months of their lives were collected from medical charts. The prevalence of aggressive and palliative interventions did not vary significantly with the diagnosis of dementia except for the use of vasopressors. Artificial nutrition was prevalent and few patients received sedatives in either group. Patients with and without dementia received similar treatments in the end-stage. A greater understanding of the course of dementia is needed to further discussions on the terminal care of people with dementia. A national consensus on how to treat end-stage demented patients is also needed.

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