A 32 year old woman rolls into the ER on a quietĀ springtime afternoon – you are told that she had just had a tonic clonic seizure.

She took a sabbatical after finishing her EM/IM residency and opened a moonshine distillery on Nostrand and Church.Ā She typically “tastes” one pint of her productĀ per day.

Her last drink was 47 hours ago.

Her GCS is 9, she is groaning, opening her eyes and localizing pain. You see no overt signs of trauma and her shirt is full of vomit.

 

 

What are the DSM-5 criteria for substance abuse?

Just Kidding

 

What are the different types of alcohol withdrawal syndromes?

6-36 hoursEARLY UNCOMPLICATED: psychomotor agitation, tremor, tachycardia and hypertension.

6-48 hoursWITHDRAWAL SEIZURESĀ (likely what our friend has):Ā 60% have multiple seizures, 3% progress to status epilepticus, 1/3 develop to DTs. If occurs with elevated ETOH level, poor prognostic sign.

12-48ALCOHOLIC HALLUCINATIONS: Visual, auditory and/or tactile with intact sensorium and normal vital signs.

48-96 hours – DELIRIUM TREMENS: Loss of consciousness/change in cognition, agitation, tachycardia, hypertension, fever, diaphoresis

** Don’t forget!!Ā NOT EVERYTHING THAT HAPPENSĀ TO ALCOHOLICS IS DUE TO THATĀ SWEET ETHANOL. You must consider: Head trauma, hypo/hyperglycemia, non-adherenceĀ with seizure medications, use of other recreational drugs or toxic alcohols, metabolic derangements and many other etiologies. That is why a head CT, basic labs and a tox screen are a good idea.

 

What scoring system can you use to guide our management?

Although not studied in the ED,Ā CIWA-ArĀ can be used to monitor treatment or guide you when the case is equivocal (not in our case..).Ā 

 

Is there room for neuroleptics in the management of alcoholic withdrawal?

As most of you know, the mainstay treatment for alcohol withdrawal is a combination of long and short acting benzodiazepines – in particular lorazepam and chlordiazepoxide. It is not recommended to use neuroleptics for anything but ISOLATED ALCOHOLIC WITHDRAWAL HALLUCINATIONĀ due to their QT prolongation,Ā since these patients are at high risk for torsades de pointes as a resultĀ of hypomagnesemia. Even for delirium tremens it is recommended to use large doses of sedative hypnotic agents such as benzodiazepines (to “a level of light somnolence with arousal when stimulated”) as this decreases mortality from 20% to <1%.

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References:

Tintinallis Emergency Medicine: A Comprehensive Study Guide.

Goldfrank’s Toxicologic Emergencies

Uptodate

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By Dr. Itamar

Special thanks to Dr. Willis

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Itamar

Resident in the combined Emergency and Internal Medicine program at Kings County Hospital and SUNY Downstate Medical Centers.

Latest posts by Itamar (see all)


Itamar

Resident in the combined Emergency and Internal Medicine program at Kings County Hospital and SUNY Downstate Medical Centers.

2 Comments

Nathan Reisman · May 26, 2015 at 6:14 am

It’s important to realize that you can get to DTs from any of the withdrawal syndromes. They don’t typically happen sequentially; anyone with tremulousness, a withdrawal seizure, or hallucinations is at risk for DTs.

    Itamar Goldstein · May 26, 2015 at 7:33 pm

    Thanks Nathan. It is always amazing to realize how far real people fall from our multiple-choice-oriented tables and algorithms.

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