Alcohol Dependence Flashcards
What is IAPT?
- Improving Access to Psychological Therapies
- IAPT services provide evidence-based psychological therapies to people with anxiety disorders and depression
- Low intensity IAPT: individuals with mild to moderate levels of anxiety +/or depression
- High intensity: individuals with moderate to severe anxiety +/or depression +/or other mental illnesses.
What is the action of chlordiazepoxide?
Type of benzodiazepine which treats symptoms of alcohol withdrawal
What is the action of thiamine?
Used to prevent Wernicke-Korsakoff (B1) syndrome due to low levels of thiamine.
What is the action of disulfiram (antabuse)?
Causes an acute reaction when alcohol is consumed in conjunction and thus minimises ongoing alcohol consumption.
What is the action of naltrexone?
Blocks opioid receptors and used to treat opioid and alcohol addiction, reduces desire to drink.
What is the action of acamprosate (Campral)?
Reduces desire to drink alcohol
What is the action of folic acid in alcohol dependence?
Alcohol affects the ability to absorb folate and also increases folate in the urine. Increasing folate improves the health of alcoholics especially during withdrawal.
What is the mechanism behind alcohol withdrawal?
- Chronic alcohol consumption increases GABA mediated inhibition in CNS and inhibits NMDA-type glutamate receptors
- Alcohol withdrawal thought to lead to opposite (decreased inhibitory GABA and increased NMDA glutamate release)
- Glutamate is an excitatory neurotransmitter
What are the symptoms of alcohol withdrawal?
- Symptoms start at 6-12hrs: tremor, sweating, tachycardia, anxiety, disturbed sleep
- Mild: HTN, tachycardia, anorexia, anxiety, emotional instability, insomnia, irritability, diaphoresis, headache and fine tremor
- Moderate: worsening mild symptoms, agitation, coarse tremor
- Severe/delirium tremens: worsening moderate symptoms plus confusion/delirium, generalised TC seizures, auditory/visual/tactile hallucinations, hypothermia subsequent to psychomotor agitation
What are the timings of more severe alcohol withdrawal symptoms?
- Severe withdrawal symptoms occur >24hrs and usually peak at 48hrs
- ~36hrs: seizures
- 48-72hrs: delirium tremens - coarse tremor, confusion, delusions, auditory and visual hallucinations, fever, tachycardia
What is the management of alcohol withdrawal?
- Patient should keep drinking until detox is started, GP should prescribe folate and thiamine supplements
- Patients with a history of complex withdrawals i.e. DT seizures, blackouts - admit to hospital until stable
- 1st line: benzodiazepines e.g. chlordiazepoxide, typically given as part of a reducing dose regime - lorazepam may be better if hepatic failure
- Carbamazepine effective in treating
- Detox should only be done by community alcohol service to monitor patient safely and prevent further withdrawals
- CBT
- Sometimes antidepressants