Ethanol withdrawal
Revision as of 17:51, 15 February 2016 by 3amrbadawy (talk | contribs)
Background
- Withdrawal symptoms due to reduced GABA and increased glutamate
- Benzos useful due to cross tolerance at ethanol GABA receptor
- Symptom triggered therapy
- As effective as fixed dose therapy, but w/ more rapid detox
Clinical Features
- Reduction in alcohol use that has been heavy and prolonged
- At least 2 of the following
- Autonomic hyperactivity (e.g., diaphoresis, HR>100)
- Increased hand tremor
- Insomnia
- Nausea/vomiting
- Transient visual, tactile, or auditory hallucinations
- Psychomotor agitation
- Anxiety
- Grand mal seizures
Seizures
- Onset after last drink: 6-48h
- Multiple seizures: 60% of pts
- Progression to DTs: 33% of pts
- Treat with benzos (not phenytoin)
Alcoholic Hallucinosis
- Onset after last drink: 12-24hr
- Visual hallucinations are most common
- Different from delirium tremens
- Resolves within 24-48 from last drink (before onset of DTs)
- No delirium
- Normal vital signs
Differential Diagnosis
Seizure
- Epileptic seizure
- First-time seizure
- Seizure with known seizure disorder
- Status epilepticus
- Temporal lobe epilepsy
- Non-compliance with anti-epileptic medications
- Hyponatremia
- INH toxicity
- Non-epileptic seizure
- Meningitis
- Encephalitis
- Brain abscess
- Intracranial hemorrhage
- Alcohol withdrawal
- Benzodiazepine withdrawal
- Barbiturate withdrawal
- Baclofen withdrawal
- Metabolic abnormalities: hyponatremia, hypernatremia, hypocalcemia, hypomagnesemia, hypoglycemia, hyperglycemia, hepatic failure, uremia
- Eclampsia
- Neurocysticercosis
- Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome
- Impact seizure (head trauma)
- Acute hydrocephalus
- Arteriovenous malformation
- Seizure with VP shunt
- Toxic ingestion (amphetamines, anticholinergics, cocaine, INH, organophosphates, TCA, salicylates, lithium, phenothiazines, bupropion, camphor, clozapine, cyclosporine, fluoroquinolones, imipenem, lead, lidocaine, metronidazole, synthetic cannabinoids, theophylline, Starfruit)
- Psychogenic nonepileptic seizure (pseudoseizure)
- Intracranial mass
- Syncope
- Hyperventilation syndrome
- Migraine headache
- Movement disorders
- Narcolepsy/cataplexy
- Post-hypoxic myoclonus (Status myoclonicus)
Diagnosis
CIWA score
Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment – Alcohol – revised (CIWA-Ar)
- Headache 0-7
- Orientation 0-3
- Tremor 0-7
- Sweating 0-7
- Anxiety 0-7
- Nausea (and Vomiting) 0-7
- Tactile Hallucinations 0-7
- Auditory Hallucinations 0-7
- Visual Hallucinations 0-7
- Agitation 0-7
Maximum Score = 67
Inpatient Management
See Alcohol withdrawal: Inpatient management
Outpatient Management
See Alcohol withdrawal: Outpatient management
Disposition
Admit
- Multiple seizures
- DTs
- Decreased LOC
- Inability to control withdrawal after administrating 3-4 doses of benzo's
- Consider ICU admission with CIWA score >20
Discharge
- Consider discharge with 3 day course of benzodiazepines if patients are attempting to quit alcohol
- Consider possible exclusions for outpatient treatment[1]:
- Substance use disorders except alcohol, nicotine, or cannabis
- Major Axis I psych disorder
- Medication hx of benzodiazepines, BBs, CCBs, antipsychotics
- Hx of head injury, epilepsy, medical instability, ECG abnormality, grossly abnormal lab value
See Also
- Beer Potomania Syndrome
- Alcohol (ETOH) Intoxication
- Alcoholic ketoacidosis
- Alcohol withdrawal: Inpatient management
- Alcohol withdrawal: Outpatient management
- Alcohol withdrawal seizures
- Altered mental status
- Delerium tremens
- EBQ:Outpatient use of benzodiazepines for the treatment of acute alcohol withdrawal
- Sedative/Hypnotic
External Links
References
- ↑ Myrick et al. A DOUBLE BLIND TRIAL OF GABAPENTIN VS. LORAZEPAM IN THE TREATMENT OF ALCOHOL WITHDRAWAL. Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2009 Sep; 33(9): 1582–1588. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2769515/
