Alcohol Withdrawal Flashcards
Definition
The symptoms that may occur when a person has been drinking too much alcohol on a regular basis and suddenly stops drinking
Aetiology/Risk Factors
· Chronic alcohol consumption suppresses the activity of glutamate (an excitatory neurotransmitter), so the body compensates by increasing sensitivity to glutamate
· So, when alcohol consumption stops, you get increased glutamate activity leading to excitatory symptoms
Epidemiology
· If untreated, 6% of alcohol-dependent patients develop clinically relevant symptoms of withdrawal
· Up to 10% of them will delirium tremens
Presenting Symptoms
History of high alcohol intake
Mild symptoms: Insomnia and fatigue Tremor Mild anxiety/nervousness Mild restlessness/agitation Nausea and vomiting Headache Sweating Palpitations Anorexia Depression Craving alcohol
Severe symptoms: Hallucinations Severe memory disturbances Disoriented to time, place and person Withdrawal seizures (generalised tonic-clonic) Delirium tremens
Delirium Tremens
An acute confusional sate often seen as withdrawal syndrome in chronic alcoholics and caused by sudden cessation of drinking alcohol. It can be precipitated by a head injury or an acute infection causing abstinence from alcohol
Features: Anxiety Tremor Sweating Vivid and terrifying visual and sensory hallucinations Can be fatal
Investigations
NONE for alcohol withdrawal itself
- Urea & Cr – check dehydration (can lead to impaired renal function)
- LFTs – check liver damage
- Ethanol: positive
- Electrolytes & lactate – high lactate suggests seizures, ketoacidosis, alcohol ingestion
- FBC – check infection, may show macrocytic anaemia
- CT head – check intracranial causes
- CXR – exclude cardiopulmonary causes
Management Plan
· Chlordiazepoxide - reduces symptoms of alcohol withdrawal (or lorazepam, diazepam)
· Barbiturates may be used if refractory to benzodiazepines (eg phenobarbitol)
· Thiamine (Pabrinex) - prevents progression to Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome
Possible Complications
Over-sedation
Delirium tremens (1-5 days)
Alcohol withdrawal seizures –> status epilepticus
Possible death if left untreated
Prognosis
Persistent insomnia and autonomic symptoms for around 6 months after acute withdrawal phase
Half of patients remain abstinent for 1 year
Prevent relapse with counselling/pharmacology
· Delirium tremens has a mortality of 35% if untreated
· Mortality is < 2% with early detection and treatment