Title: Acute Management of the Alcoholic Patient
1Acute Management of the Alcoholic Patient
- Sandhya Wahi-Gururaj, MD, MPH
- Department of Internal Medicine
- UNSOM (Las Vegas)
2Learning Objectives
- To recognize alcohol use disorders
- Recognize alcohol withdrawal syndromes
- Manage withdrawal syndromes
3Some Stats
- Two-thirds U.S. population drinks EtOH
- 17 of drinkers have AUD
- 15-20 of primary care or hospitalized patients
Am J Addictions 200312S12-S25 JAMA
1997278(2)144-151
4- A 42 yo M presents with 4 days of N/V abdominal
pain and LH. He drinks socially on a daily
basis. He occasionally has a beer in the morning
to get going and help with his tremors. - PE T99 HR 110 BP 150/90 R 16 orthostatic
changes - Gen Appears somewhat uncomfortable
- Abd NABS, soft, TTP epigastrium, no
rebound/guarding - Neuro Fine tremor with extended hand
Does your patient have an AUD?
5Defining AUDs Alcohol Abuse
- Maladaptive pattern of use
- Failure to fulfill work, school, or social
obligations - Recurrent substance use in physically hazardous
situations (driving) - Recurrent legal problems
- Continued use despite social or interpersonal
problems
DSM-IV-TR 2000
6Defining AUDsAlcohol Dependence
- 3 or more
- Tolerance
- Withdrawal
- Substance taken in larger quantity or longer
duration than intended - Persistent desire to cut down or control use
- Time spent obtaining, using, recovering
- Social, occupational, or recreational tasks
sacrificed - Use continues despite physical and psychological
problems
DSM-IV-TR 2000
7Defining AUDs
- Alcoholic not technically recognized
- Alcohol Dependence (alcoholism until 1980)
- Primary chronic disease
- Craving
- Loss of Control
- Physical Dependence
- Tolerance
- Progressive and fatal
http//pubs.niaaa.nih.gov/publications/aa30.htm
8A Drink 14 grams of Ethanol
- Beer 12 oz.
- Malt-liquor 8 oz.
- Wine 5 oz.
- 80 Proof Spirits 1.5 oz.
9Alcohol Use (number of drinks)
- Moderate Places at low risk for ETOH problems
- M 0-2/day
- F 0-1/day
- Over 65 0-1/day
- Heavy
- M gt4/occasion 14/week
- F gt3/occasion 7/week
- Binge M 5/occasion F 4/occasion
www.niaaa.nih.gov
10For which withdrawal syndromes is your patient at
risk?
- On hospital day 1?
- On hospital day 3?
11Withdrawal Syndromes
- Minor Alcohol Withdrawal
- Alcohol Withdrawal Seizures
- Alcoholic Hallucinosis
- Delirium Tremens
12Minor Withdrawal
- Due to CNS and sympathetic hyperactivity
- Onset within 6 to 36 hours
- Resolves 24-48 hours
- May have significant serum ETOH level
13Minor Withdrawal
- Insomnia
- Tremulousness
- Mild anxiety
- GI upset
- Headache
- Diaphoresis
- Palpitations
- Anorexia
14Withdrawal Seizures
- Onset within 6 to 48 hours
- May be as early as 2 hours
- 3 of patients with alcohol dependence
- 3 status epilepticus
- Usually isolated to single episode
- Generalized tonic-clonic seizure
15Alcoholic Hallucinosis
- Onset 12-48 hours
- Resolve within 24-48 hours
- Usually visual
- Auditory, tactile occur
- No global clouding of sensorium
16Delirium Tremens
- 1-5 patients
- Onset 48-96 hours
- Lasts 1-5 days
- Mortality up to 5
- older age
- prior pulmonary disease
- Tgt104F
- Coexisting liver disease
17Delirium TremensRisk Factors
- Sustained drinking
- Previous DTs (OR 2.6)
- Previous DTs or withdrawal seizure (OR 3.1)
- Age gt30
- Concurrent illness (OR 6.9)
- SBP gt145 mmHg (OR 4.1)
- Chronic Medical Illness (OR 1.9)
- Presenting later
Sub Abuse 200223(2)83-94. Hosp Pract June 15,
1995
18Delirium Tremens Clinical Manifestations
- Hallucinations
- Disorientation
- Autonomic signs
- Tachycardia
- Hypertension
- Low-grade fever
- Agitation
- Diaphoresis
- Hyperventilation
19Which labs should be sent?
- CBC
- Renal Panel
- LFTs
- Urinalysis
- Coags
- Alcohol Level
- Urine Tox Screen
20Additional Complications due to Alcohol
- Volume depletion
- Hypokalemia
- Hypomagnesemia
- Hypophosphatemia
- Hypo or hypernatremia
- Hypoglycemia
- Alcoholic Ketoacidosis
21Hypophosphatemia
- Decreased intake
- Poor dietary intake phosphorus and Vit D
- Chronic diarrhea
- Phosphate binders OTC
- Increased urinary output
- Secondary hyperparathyroidism
- Proximal tubule defect
- Drops 12-36 hours
22Additional Laboratory Abnormalities
- Elevated serum transaminases
- Elevated serum GGT
- Elevated carbohydrate-deficient transferrin
- Hematologic derangements
23How will you manage your patient?
24ManagementGeneral Considerations
- Withdrawal diagnosis of exclusion
- Quiet, well-lit room
- Frequent reorientation
- Volume repletion
- Electrolyte monitoring and repletion
- Thiamine
- Multivitamins, Folate
- Glucose
25Management
- Benzodiazepines are drug of choice
- Oral therapy preferred unless DTs or a seizure
- Neuroleptics vs. sedative hypnotics
- RR mortality 6.6 (1.2-34.7)
- BDZ decrease duration of treatment
- No RCT for short vs. long-acting in DTs
- No RCT for intermittent vs. continuous
Arch Intern Med 20041641405-1412.
26Management Benzodiazepines
- Long-acting agents
- Chlordiazepoxide (Librium)
- Peaks in 2 hours
- T1/2 5-30 hours
- Diazepam (Valium)
- IV or po form
- Onset more rapid po peaks 30-90 min
- T1/2 20-50 hours
- Preferred due to active metabolites t1/2 2-5 days
- Meta-analysis shows reduced risk seizures
27ManagementBenzodiazepines
- Short-acting agents
- Lorazepam (Ativan)
- T1/2 12 hours
- Oxazepam (Serax)
- T1/2 2.8-8.6 hours
- Preferred with advanced cirrhosis
MICROMEDEX Healthcare Series Lexi-Comp, Inc.
28Dosing Schedule
JAMA 1994272(7)519-523.
29lt10 mild 10-14 mod gt15 major
Br J Addiction 1989841353-1357.
30Dosing Schedule
Symptom-Triggered Fixed Schedule
Total chlordiazepoxide 100 mg (0-400) 425 mg (350-750)
Total duration 9 hrs (0-43) 68 hrs (64-73)
- No differences in severity of withdrawal,
incidence of seizures or DTs - Mean CIWA-Ar score 9
JAMA 1994272(7)519-523.
31(No Transcript)
32Dosing Schedule
Arch Int Med 20021621117-1121.
33Dosing Schedule
Symptom-triggered Fixed-dose
Tx with oxazepam 22 (39) 61 (100)
Total mg (range) 37.5 81.7 (0-375) 231.4 29.4 (180-375)
Total mg if dose gt0 95.4 107.7 231.4 29.4
Tx duration (mean) 20 hrs 62.7 hrs
Major Complications 1 seizure 0
Arch Int Med 20021621117-1121.
34What About Medical Inpatients?
- Mayo Clinic Retrospective Review
- 216 Admissions
- STT
- No differences in duration, total BDZ use, BDZ
use at all - Decrease in DT occurrence, especially patients
without a prior h/o DTs
Mayo Clin Proc 200176695-701.
35Management Dosing Schedule
- Fixed dosing
- High risk prior seizures or DTs
prolonged/sustained drinking - Front-loading
- Symptom triggered
- Patient centered
- Less meds and shorter hospital course
- Nursing dependent
36ManagementAlternate Therapy
- Alpha-2 agonists clonidine
- Beta blockers
- Antipsychotics lowers seizure threshold
- Baclofen
- Ethyl Alcohol
- Barbiturates
- Propofol
37Conclusions
- AUD maladaptive pattern of use
- 4 withdrawal syndromes
- Watch for concomitant medical complications
- Mainstay of therapy is BDZ
- Consider symptom-triggered therapy
- Pick one drug and increase dose/frequency if
needed