Alcohol withdrawal
From IDWiki
Background
Risk Factors for Severe Withdrawal
- Severity predicted by PAWSS scale: if score ≤3 can manage as outpatient
- History of alcohol withdrawal, especially if previously severe (e.g. delirium tremens)
- Age
- Alcohol tolerance
- Concurrent sedative medications
- Major medical comorbidities
- Drinking all day long
Clinical Manifestations
- 6 to 12 hours after last drink: shaking, headache, sweating, anxiety, nausea, or vomiting
- 12 to 24 hours after last drink: confusion, hallucinosis (with awareness of reality), tremor, or agitation
- 24 to 48 hours after last drink: seizures
- 48 hours after last drink: delirium tremens, high blood pressure, and fever
- Can persist anywhere from 4 to 12 days
Investigations
- Monitor electrolytes and extended electrolytes for refeeding syndrome
Management
- Given the balance of risks (minimal) and benefits (potentially large), almost all patients treated for alcohol withdrawal should receive supplemental thiamine
- Standard: 250 mg IM/IV q24h x3d
- High-dose: 500 mg IV q8h x3
Inpatient Management
Benzodiazepine Protocols
- If history of seizures: diazepam 20mg q1h x3 doses before starting CIWA
- Can use diazepam, lorazepam (if liver disease), or Chlordiazepoxide
- Start CIWA-Ar (Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment - Alcohol revised) q1h
Phenobarbital Protocols
General Protocol
- Load phenobarbital 10 mg/kg IV up front over 30min (if has not received significant benzodiazepines)
- Then give 130-260 mg IV prn for mild to severe withdrawal symptoms
- Titrate to effect; there is no maximum dose
- Maintenance with 100-200 mg PO/IM q1h prn
CAMH protocol
- Loading: phenobarbital 120 mg po q1h until phenobarbital loading effect score is 3 to 4, then stop loading
- Maintenance: phenobarbital 60 mg po qid
- Taper:
- Decrease by 30 mg each day from a starting dose of phenobarbital 60 mg po qid
- 60/60/60/60, 60/30/60/60, 60/30/30/60, 60/30/30/30, 30/30/30/30, 30/–/30/30, 30/–/–/30, 30/–/–/–, stop
- Takes 8 days
- Phenobarbital loading effect scale
- Nystagmus: absent (0); present on extension of lateral gaze (1); easily elicited and sustained (2); coarse, sustained nystagmus (3)
- Dysarthria: absent (0); minor slurring of some words (1); moderate slurring frequently (2); severe slurring, unintelligible (3)
- Ataxia: absent (0); mildly unsteady on tandem gait (1); moderately unsteady on regular gait (2); needs support on regular gait (3)
- Emotional lability: normal, as before loading (0); some mood change (1); obvious mood change, inappropriate (2); uninhibited, mood swings (3)
Seizures
Outpatient Management
- For patients at low risk of complicated withdrawal, office-based management can be considered
- Start on Monday or Tuesday, unless there is weekend coverage for the clinic
- Assess the patient daily
- Typically use diazepam per schedule below, with thiamine 100 mg po daily for 5 days
Schedule | Day 1 | Day 2 | Day 3 | Day 4 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rigid | 10 mg qid | 10 mg tid | 10 mg bid | 10 mg qhs |
Flexible | 10 mg q4-6h prn | 10 mg q6-8h prn | 10 mg q12h prn | 10 mg qhs prn |
Front-loaded | 20 mg q2-4h until sedated, followed by 10 mg q4-6h prn (max 60 mg daily) | 10 mg q4-6h prn (max 40 mg) | 10 mg q4-6h prn (max 40 mg) | none |
- Symptoms to trigger prn doses in the above schedules include heart rate >100, DBP >90 mmHg, or signs of withdrawal
- Front-loaded schedules often need very little medication after the load