Published Jul 17, 2007
GingerSue
1,842 Posts
reading about hepatic encephalopathy (in the section about cirrhosis),
there is description of mental and neurological changes because of ammonia that crosses the blood-brain barrier.
And euphoria is one of them
why does the person experience euphoria?
all4schwa
524 Posts
euphonia is just one of the many aspects of crazy. i deal with a lot of pts with neurologic changes and (where and how the brain is being affected decides the outcome) count my lucky stars when my pts are experiencing euphoria...
...as opposed to rage, paranoia, catatonia...
leslie :-D
11,191 Posts
in its' early stages, the pt can display euphoria, anxiety, agitation, lethargy, lability, etc.
it's just one of the potential se's of neurotoxic insult.
leslie
misserella8036
158 Posts
My best friend and uncle both passed away due to liver problems. They both suffered from encephalopathy. They never seemed euphoric. The biggest factor was confusion or forgetfulness. They would forget who I was and get agitated. It's an extremely bad side-effect. I could only hope they occasionally had bouts of euphoria.
EmmaG, RN
2,999 Posts
I guess I've seen what you might call euphoria, but most often it's more like bewilderment. Best way I know to describe it. The ammonia interferes with neurotransmitters... amino acids...
By the time we see them in the hospital, they've often gone past any euphoria, and are lethargic to obtunded.
Indy, LPN, LVN
1,444 Posts
Yeah, what they said. I haven't seen much euphoria. People talk to dead folks, try to pull out their chest tubes, and some of 'em just enter another world altogether. We had one lady who lived on Sesame Street. I had to sing the "eleven" song to her to check her blood sugar without a fight. Of course I shut the door, no was was I gonna explain that.