PPW2 Alcohols Flashcards
What is ethanol antidote for?
It is antidote for methanol and ethylene glycol
How is ethanol eliminated
2-8% by urine, sweat, or breath
92-98% metabolized by liver
What are the three enzymes that can convert alcohol to acetaldehyde?
- Alcohol dehydrogenase
- CYP 450
- Catalase
What is responsible for ethanol addiction
Catalase metabolized ethanol in the brain to acetaldehyde which combines with neurotransmitters to form THIQs which responsible for addiction
What types of people tolerate alcohol more and why? And what syndrome do they get?
Most individuals use acetaldehyde dehydrogenase called ALD2, while some East Asians and American Indians use ALD2*2 which is far less efficient in breaking down acetaldehyde.
-They get flush syndrome
What is reverse tolerance?
It means that people with liver damage produce less alcohol dehydrogenase than those with healthy liver and become more intoxicated at smaller doses of alcohol
What is Antabuse reaction and how can we treat it?
It is the drug that makes people sick if taken with alcohol because it binds and inhibits acetaldehyde dehydrogenase.
-Symptoms include; Facial flushing, headaches, nausea, vomiting and heart palpitations
We can treat it with 500-1000 mg iv of vitamin C and 40-100mg ferry iv
Which formula is used to estimate peak blood alcohol concentration?
Widmark formula
Drinking small amount of alcohol decreases risk of?
Heart disease, stroke, diabetes mellitus and early death
Drinking high amounts of alcohol increases risk of?
Heart disease, stroke, hypertension, and atrial fibrillation
What tests do we use for alcohol intoxication?
Breath test, saliva test and blood test
What are the metabolic effects of ethanol poisoning?
- Hypoglycemia
- Electrolyte imbalance (hypokalemia, hypocalcemia, hypophosphatemia and hypomagnesemia)
- Alcoholic ketoacidosis
What does the treatment of ethanol depend on and how do we treat it?
- It depend on the patients condition, not the ethanol level in serum
- Oxygen therapy, funds Iv, sedatives or antipsychotics, and symptomatic treatment (hypoglycemia treatment, electrolyte imbalance treatment, and liver failure treatment). We may also give physostigmine and naloxone
When do symptoms of alcohol withdrawal begin, and when are they worst?
They begin around six hours following last drink, are worst at 24-72 hours and improve by seven days
How do we treat withdrawal symptoms of alcohol?
Fluids iv, sedatives, beta blockers and haloperidol