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Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

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Page 1: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Alcohol Related Disorders

Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFPDecember 5, 2002

Page 2: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002
Page 3: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Denver man. 46 yo. Passenger in MVC 2 hours

ago. • Driving with sister. T-boned low speed.

Belted. No airbags. Spinal precautions via EMS

• No LOC• 36o, 145/90, 92 reg, 97% RA• Contusion R forehead• Fracture R 3rd and 4th proximal phalanges • 3 R-sided rib #

Page 4: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Case 1 Continues

• Normal hematocrit, lytes, glucose• Lives with sister. Telemarketer• No meds, no allergies, no

hospitalizations, no insurance…• Not confused. Shaky• States “just nervous”

Page 5: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

4 hours later

• 37.50, 150/100, 98, 98%RA• Normal CT head and cervical spines• Anxious and “still recovering from

the shock of the accident”• Sister states “he is a nervous guy”• On casual exam – generalized

tremor

Page 6: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

5 hour post arrival ED

• 7 hours post MVC – generalized seizure x 3 mins, then 15 mins then 15 mins…and so on…

• Lorazepam, haloperidol• Seizures abate an hour later• Very confused, agitated, and

delirious• Admitted and required over 800mg

of lorazepam over the next two days

Page 7: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Alcohol Withdraw Syndrome

• Incomplete understanding of neuropathophysiology

• State of CNS excitation• Develops 6 to 36 hours after

cessation or reduction of EtOH intake

Page 8: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Classic Signs of Minor EtOH Withdraw

• 6 to 36hrs• Mild autonomic hyperactivity• Nausea, anorexia, tremor,

tachycardia, hypertension, hypereflexia, anxiety, disturbed sleep…

Page 9: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Major Withdraw Sx?

• Usually 12 – 50 hours post • More pronounced sx as per minor

WD• Major anxiety, auditory and visual

hallucinations, decreased seizure threshold, delirium

Page 10: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Delirium Tremens

• Extreme end of EtOH WD spectrum• Gross tremor, fever, incontinence,

frightening hallucinations

Page 11: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

This guy is in EtOH withdraw…

What do you have to rule out?• Other ingestion and/or WD syndrome

• Intracranial pathology• Infection• Hypoglycemia• Electrolyte abnormalities• Hypoxia• Organ failure

Page 12: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Denver Man Case

• Stopped drinking 24 hours ago.• 6 rye/day several years• EtOH withdraw…Delirium tremens• Treatment?

Page 13: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Management of AWS - DT

• Provide relief from anxiety and hallucinations

• Help prevent seizures• Allow detection of psychiatric

illness• Prepare for long-term treatment!

Page 14: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Management of AWS

• More than 150 drugs and combinations reported

• Benzodiazepines considered cornerstone

• No clear superiority of any on BDZ• Consider delivery modality,

bioavailability, t1/2

Page 15: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

BDZ

• Lorazepam– Good bioavailability po, im,iv, – T1/2 7-14 hrs– Rel safe in hepatic/renal dysfxn

• Diazepam • Chlordiazepoxide• May require massive doses – eg diazepam

2600mg/48hr, midazolam 75 mg 1 hr,

Page 16: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Butyrophenones

• Haloperidol and droperidol• May have synergistic effect with

BDZ• IV, IM, PO

Page 17: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Others

1. Beta-blockers• AWS increased noradrenergic

activity• BDZ no direct na affects• Consider obvious

contraindications2. Alpha agonists

Page 18: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Adjunctive Therapy

• Thiamine 100 mg IV or PO• MgSO4 2-4g IV (po in non-acute setting

has improved strength, LTs, electrolytes)

• Volume repletion• Electrolyte normalization• Phenothiazines unhelpful

– Hypotension, decrease seizure threshold, extrapyramidal effects

Page 19: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

EtOH Related Seizures

• Differentiate between alcohol related seizures and alcohol withdraw seizures

• Underlying and non-EtOH related seizure disorder?

Page 20: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

EtOH and Seizures Causes

• AWS• Neurotoxic effects• Metabolic brain disorder• Cerebral trauma• Precipitating seizures with

underlying epilepsy• Cerebral compromise – infection,

bleed

Page 21: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

DIMS

Page 22: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Management Issues

• Glucose, thiamine, MgSO4, • Anticonvulsants?

Page 23: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

EtOH. 7 min generalized seizure, 1st time. N CT, Lytes,

glucose

• Do you start phenytoin?

Page 24: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

EtOH. Multiple past hx seizures. Negative epilepsy w/u in past. N CT, glucose, lytes. Non-adherent

with dilantin.Do you restart it?

• Controversial.• May increase incidence of seizures if

suddenly stopped• Must determine cause and effect- is it

EtOH?, nonadherence?, new etiology? • Rehab!!

Page 25: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

EtOH. Status epileptcus.Management? Would you still

use dilantin?

• ABC• BDZ• Phenytoin

Page 26: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

• The case 1 clinical clerk

• What drug would you use?

Page 27: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

What is Zero-Order Kinetics?

• Elimination at a constant rate regardless of concentration. Linear

Page 28: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

What is first-order kinetics?

• Rate of elimination is proportional to concentration.

Page 29: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Who Cares?

• Alcohols largely zero-order therefore, t1/2 can be difficult to predict

• ASA and phenytoin at high concentrations

Page 30: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Case 2 - “Father Tito”

• Found slumped at bottom of stairs at home by fellow priests.

• Empty bottle of beer at feet, multiple empty beer cans

• No obvious trauma• Mumbling incoherently, unable to

stand, c/o headache

Page 31: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Case 2

• LOC declines rapidly• Intubated en route to FMC for GCS<8

Spinal precautions• GCS 8• 80/55 90 370 • PER sluggish 4mm B, Withdraw to pain, N

fundi, R sided crackles, blue fluid on shirt• Foley - anuric

Page 32: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

What now?

• Na 141, K 4, Cl 95, HCO3 20, glucose 6, creatinine 90, urea 3, AG 26

• ABG – 7.2/27/112/18/-10• CXR R infiltrate nil else• What are your thoughts on

diagnosis?

Page 33: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Common sources of methanol?

• Sternos, glass cleaners, carburator fluid, antifreeze, window-washer fluid, shallacs, laquers, adhesives, copy fluid, inks

Page 34: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Can methanol be absorbed via transdermal and the respiratory routes?

• Yes• What toxic alcohol doesn’t work for

“huffing”?

Page 35: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

What metabolites are responsible for methanol’s toxic effects?

• What B-Vitamin is necessary for methanol metabolism?

Page 36: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Methanol Metabolism

Page 37: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Why is it important to know what time pt ingested WW

fluid?

• Methanol’s toxic effects related to metabolites.

• T1/2 variable, prolonged and increased with co-ingestion of EtOH

• Sx may not appear until 12 –30 hrs post-injestion

• Zero-order kinetics at higher doses

Page 38: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Pathophysiology

• Optic neuropathy and putaminal necrosis two main complications

• Increased lactate production from formate-induced inhibition of mitochondrial respiration exacerbates acidemia

• Formaldehyde – retinal edema and optic papillitis

Page 39: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Methanol Pathophysiology

• Peak absorption 30-90min post GI• Transdermal and pulmonary

possible• Toxic metabolites 14h-30h

depending upon dose and co-ingestants

Page 40: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Clinical Features

• Wary of delayed presentation• CNS depression, HA, seizures• Visual disturbances – variable,

“snowstorm”• Abdominal pain, N, Vx

• Anion-gap metabolic acidosis

Page 41: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Ophthalmologic exam

• Dilated pupils• Sluggish or absent reaction to light• Poor accomadation• Hyperemia of optic disc• Retinal edema

Page 42: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Other Findings in Methanol Toxicity

• CT head – basal ganglia infarction –”Parkinsonian-like”

• GI - N, Vx, severe epigastric pain• Acute pancreatitis

Page 43: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Harbringer of poor outcomes

• Hypotension• Bradycardia

• Outcome is better correlated to severity of metabolic acidosis rather than methanol level

Page 44: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Gaps

• Father Tito had an osmol gap of 8. Does this r/o significant methanol toxicity?– Can have N osmol gap– Wary of lab calculations and

calculated osmol gaps. Consider 2Na +glucose+urea

– Freezing point depression

Page 45: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Anion-gap metabolic acidosis

• Strong and relatively consistent finding in methanol toxicity

Page 46: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

“Father Tito”• Methanol level 24 mmol/l• EtOH 19 mmol/l• Aspiration pneumonitis

• Hemodialysis recommended > 7.8mmol/L

Page 47: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Disposition

• ICU• EtOH therapy• Hemodialysis• FIFE• D/C ICU after 3 days• F/U ophthalmology

Page 48: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

What makes you the most drunk?

• Isopropanol, methanol, ethylene glycol, or EtOH

• Isopropanol, ethelyen glycol, EtOH, methanol

Page 49: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

What alcohol causes long QT?

• Why?

Page 50: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Case 3 - 19 yo man. Suicide attempt with ingestion of

250ml antifreeze 6 hours ago

• Rural community – EMS to FMC• GCS 15• 120/80, 90, 16, SpO2 99%, 36.7• CVS, Resp, CNS, abdo exam

normal• No other ingestions

Page 51: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Case 3

• Na 144, K 3.5, Cl 106, HCO3 20, AG 18• CBC , urea, creatinine N• 7.3/38/90/21/97%RA• APAP, ASA nil• Osmolar gap 10• What are your ingestion concerns?• What else do you want to order?

Page 52: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Case 3

• EtOH, methanol, ethylene glycol levels

• Urinalysis– What are you expecting to see on

urinalysis?

Page 53: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Case 3 Urinalysis

• Crystalluria • Calcium oxalate monohydrate

crystals more specifically• Markers of tubular dysfunction

may also be present

Page 54: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

What products contain Ethylene glycol?

• Antifreeze/coolant• Deicing fluid• Brake fluid• Solvents• Component of some paints,

cosmetics and laquers

Page 55: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

What are EG’s toxic metabolites?

Page 56: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Pathophysiology of EG• Colorless, odorless and sweet• Rapid GI absorption – peak 1-4hrs• T1/2 increased from 3-5hrs to

>15hrs with EtOH > 17mmol/l• Toxic metabolites- aldehydes,

gylcolate, oxalate, and lactate- effect lungs, kidney, heart and brain

• Vit B2 & B6 deficiency increase toxic metabolite production

Page 57: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

EG Pathophysiology

• Glyoxylic acid also metabolized to formic and oxalic acid

• Metabolic acidosis• Oxalic combines with Ca –

crystalluria(50% of cases) and possible clinically significant hypocalcemia

Page 58: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Three phases of EG intoxication?

• CNS depression 1h-12h

• Cardiopulmonary 12h-24h

• Nephrotoxicity 24h – 72h

Page 59: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

CNS – Phase 1

• Inebriation• Hallucinations• Coma• Seizures• Of Note – optic fundi normal but

nystagmus and opthalmoplegia possible

Page 60: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Cardiopulmonary – Phase 2

• Tachycardia/pnea and hypertension

• CHF – ARDS and subsequent CVS collapse

• Rarely myositis

Page 61: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Hallmarks of EG Toxicity

• Inebriation but no scent of alcohol• Anion- gap metabolic acidosis• Crystalluria

Page 62: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Nephrotoxixity – Phase 3

• Flank pain & CVA tenderness• Oliguric RF and ATN

• Crystal and direct nephrotoxic effect

Page 63: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Delayed Neurological Sequelae Phase 4

• All associated with RF• 6-12 d later• Facial & auditory nerve oxalosis

• Parkinsonian-like symptoms

• Intervention finding? – dialysis since 1978

Page 64: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Case 3

• APAP, ASA, methanol negative• EtOH 25 mmol/L

• EG level 12 mmol/L

• Hemodialysis > 4.03 mmol/L• Lethal cases reported > 5.69 mmol/L

Page 65: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Treatment for EG and Methanol Toxicity

• Is there a role for gastric lavage?

• Is there a role for activated charcoal?

• What about forced diuresis?

Page 66: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Treatment

1. Correction of metabolic acidosis

2. Prevent formation of toxic metabolites through ADH blockade

3. Removal of parent alcohol

Page 67: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Metabolic Acidosis Correction

• NaHCO3 -bolus and infusion

• Aim to normalize arterial pH• May require large amounts• Definite acute benefits and may be

beneficial in reversing visual defects

• Wary of worsening hypocalcemia

Page 68: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

ADH Blockade

• EtOH or fomepizole• What EtOH serum level do you

titrate to?• 20-30 mmol/L• ADH affinity for EtOH is 10-20 x

methanol’s and 100 x EG’s• Wary level, glucose and vitamins• Monitor q1-4h

Page 69: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Fomepizole- Methylprazole

• Affinity for ADH 8000x that of EtOH• Easier administration, minimal CNS

effects, do not need to follow levels, longer t1/2

• $$, pregnant class C, pediatric literature sparse

• Awaiting META trial

• Doesn’t replace dialysis!!

Page 70: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Hemodialysis

• Cornerstone of therapy• EG > 4.03 mmol/L• Methanol > 7.8 mmol/L• Depends on timing and clinical

scenario! • Or recalcitrant metabolic acidosis,

electrolyte abnormalities, renal failure• Decreases t1/2 to 2.5-3.5 hrs• End point?

Page 71: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Cofactors

• Folic acid in methanol toxicity – 50mg

• Thiamine and pyridoxine in hyperoxaluria of EG toxicity – 100 and 50 mg respectively

• Calcium gluconate? Fine balance. Wary in EG

• MgSO4 with thiamine

Page 72: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Disposition Issues

• EtOH infusion/ hemodialysis – ICU• Nephrology• F/U ophthalmology• Neurology•

Page 73: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Prevention

• Bittering agents?

• Less toxic alcohols such as propylene glycol?

Page 74: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Case 4 42 yo man in YK. Cut head after 12 beers and 2 hair

sprays• What toxic alcohol?• So very drunk

Page 75: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

What products contain isopropyl alcohol?

• Rubby• Solvent• Disinfectants• Hair products• Jewelry cleaners

Page 76: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Pathophysiology

• 2 x as potent and 2-4x longer acting than EtOH

• Onset 30 mins• T1/2 7h• First-order kinetics

Page 77: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Isopropanol ADH

NAD -NADH

Acetone

Acetate and Formate

CO2

Page 78: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Clinical Features

• Hallmark ketonemia and ketonuria without elevated blood glucose or glycosuria

• GI irritant – gastritis – hemorrhagic…

• Peripheral vasodilation• Hypotension• Hypoglycemia

Page 79: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

IA Ingestion

• Classically– Smell– Acidosis with ketonuria/emia– Osmol gap– Mild or non-existant acidemia

Page 80: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Management

• Rarely dangerous• Supportive • Inotropes for severe hypotension• Most can be discharged once

positive sobering trend after 6-8hrs• Wary vitamins and electrolytes

Page 81: Alcohol Related Disorders Simon Pulfrey MSc, MD, CCFP December 5, 2002

Summary

• Always consider possibility of methanol and/or EG toxicity in the comatose, suicidal and desperate drunk

• Do not be reassured by a normal Osmol gap

• Start ADH blockade early