Tuesday Advanced Cases

Alcohol Withdrawal By Dr. Sandhya Ashokkumar

HPI

  • A 53-year-old male with a history of chronic daily alcohol use presents to the ED via EMS after a witnessed seizure at home
  • The medics say he drinks every day, but his last drink was 3 days ago because he was not able to go to the store (history obtained from the sister who witnessed the seizure)

Physical Examination

T 98.3F, BP 177/106, HR 191, RR 22, Sat 93% 

  • Patient appears anxious, uncomfortable, and is actively vomiting blood tinged sputum
  • He appears confused and is not answering questions appropriately
  • He is tachycardic and his lungs are clear to auscultation bilaterally
  • Abd: soft NTND

Differential 

  • Alcohol withdrawal/ Delirium Tremens
  • Thyrotoxicosis
  • Sepsis
  • Pulmonary embolism
  • Heart failure

Workup and Management

  • The nurse informs you that the patient is seizing
  • This patient is exhibiting evidence of delirium tremens (psychomotor agitation and autonomic instability) and alcohol withdrawal seizure
  • The patient is no longer tolerating his secretions, he is confused, gurgling, and requires a definitive airway
  • After intubation, you bolus the patient with propofol and start him a propofol infusion
  • The patient is admitted to the ICU for further management

Teaching Points

  • ETOH withdrawal begins 6-8 hours after last intake and peaks in 72 hours 
  • Symptom based treatment via the CIWA score can help stratify patients, scores >15 indicate severe withdrawal
  • Start with IV diazepam at 10mg or lorazepam at 4mg and repeat them in doubling doses
  • Consider adding phenobarbital for refractory cases (i.e. after 200 mg of diazepam)
  • Consider propofol as the induction agent and sedative post-intubation as propofol potentiates GABA receptor activity and inhibits NMDA receptors Summary 
  • Delerium tremens can result in death from hyperthermia, arrhythmia and seizures

Sources:

Long D, Long B, Koyfman A. The emergency medicine management of severe alcohol withdrawal. The American Journal of Emergency Medicine. 2017;35(7):1005-1011. doi:10.1016/j.ajem.2017.02.002

Schuckit MA, Author Affiliations From the Department of Psychiatry. Recognition and Management of Withdrawal Delirium (Delirium Tremens): NEJM. New England Journal of Medicine. https://www.nejm.org/doi/10.1056/NEJMra1407298. Published February 5, 2015. Accessed December 9, 2020.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *