History
- Often provided by EMS, family, or friends
- Beware the “frequent flyer” in the ED:
- Can sometimes have other causes of AMS:
- Hepatic disease/encephalopathy
- Seizures (postictal)
- Hypoglycemia
- Head injury or intracranial bleeding
Physical-Exam
- Vital signs:
- Acute intoxication: Normal or depressed
- Withdrawal: Usually elevated
- Mental status:
- Acute intoxication: Somnolent, obtunded, or comatose
- Withdrawal: Hyperalert, agitated
- Signs of hepatic injury:
- Jaundice
- Icterus
- Spider angiomata
- Asterixis
- Hepatomegaly
- Signs of malnutrition:
- Alopecia
- Poor dentition
- Poor muscle mass
- Abdominal wasting
- Temporal wasting
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Obtain accurate alcohol ingestion and abstinence history
- Investigate for life-threatening causes of seizures:
- Hypoglycemia (get rapid bedside glucose)
- Intracranial hemorrhage
- CNS infection
- Electrolyte abnormalities
- Evaluate for occult trauma
- Monitor all vital signs frequently:
- Hyperthermia predicts poorer outcomes
DIAGNOSTIC TESTS & INTERPRETATION
Lab
- Alcohol level if abnormal mental status
- Urine toxicology panel to screen for coingestants
- Electrolytes, BUN, creatinine, and glucose
- CBC
- Magnesium, calcium, and phosphate
- PTT, PT/INR if coagulopathy suspected
- LFTs if liver disease suspected
- Ammonia level if hepatic encephalopathy suspected
- Urinary ketones or serum acetone if alcoholic ketoacidosis suspected
Imaging
- CT of head if:
- Alteration in mental status is out of proportion to expected AMS based on serum alcohol level
- Suspected head trauma
- Signs of increased intracranial pressure or focal findings on neurologic exams
- New-onset seizure
- Unimproved or deteriorating level of consciousness
- EEG differentiates alcohol withdrawal seizures from idiopathic epilepsy
- Chest radiograph if suspected aspiration or pneumonia
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Acute alcohol intoxication:
- Hypoglycemia
- Carbon dioxide narcosis
- Mixed-drug overdose
- Ethylene glycol, methanol, or isopropanol poisoning
- Hepatic encephalopathy
- Psychosis
- Severe vertigo
- Psychomotor seizure
- Alcohol withdrawal and seizures:
- Sedative–hypnotic withdrawal
- Acute intoxication or poisoning:
- Carbon monoxide
- Isoniazid (especially if prolonged seizures not responding to standard therapy)
- Amphetamine
- Anticholinergic
- Cocaine
- Secondary seizure disorders:
- Infection
- Meningitis
- Encephalitis
- Brain abscess
- Trauma
- Intracranial hemorrhage
- CVA
- Tumor
- Anticonvulsant noncompliance
- Thyroid disorder
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
- Administer benzodiazepines for seizures
- Give naloxone, oxygen, and dextrose for comatose individuals
- Intubate as necessary for airway protection to prevent aspiration
- C-spine immobilization if suspected trauma
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Airway, breathing, circulation (ABCs)
- Evaluate C-spine if suspected trauma
- Initial IV rehydration with 0.9 NS, then D5 0.45 NS
- Administer naloxone, thiamine, and glucose (or Accu-Chek) if altered mental status
- Benzodiazepines if seizing (may require large doses)
Pediatric Considerations
- Young children have decreased hepatic glycogen reserves
- Cannot mount an appropriate response to increased glucose needs
- Rapid bedside glucose (Accu-Chek) is ESSENTIAL:
- Administer dextrose if indicated with D5 (10 mL/kg), D10 (5 mL/kg), or D25 (2 mL/kg) depending on age and size
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Alcohol intoxication:
- Rehydrate with IV fluids
- Correct electrolyte abnormalities:
- Magnesium
- Potassium
- Folate
- Thiamine
- Multivitamins
- Alcoholic ketoacidosis:
- Aggressive rehydration with D5 0.9 NS
- Exclude other causes of wide anion-gap metabolic acidosis
- Alcohol withdrawal syndrome:
- CIWA-Ar
- Validated scale for assessing withdrawal severity
- Guides initial pharmacotherapy
- Gauges response to therapy and needs for repeat dosing (“symptom-triggered” therapy)
- Benzodiazepines are the agent of choice:
- Cross-tolerant with alcohol
- Increases GABA
A
-mediated transmission
- Anticonvulsant effect
- Large, frequent doses required with significant withdrawal
- May halt progression to DTs
- Barbiturates (phenobarbital):
- Useful if severe withdrawal or DTs refractory to large doses of benzodiazepines
- Propofol:
- Agent of choice for intubated patients
- Completely suppresses seizure activity
- Requires intubation/ventilation
- Caution if hypotensive
- β-blocker (labetalol, esmolol, or metoprolol):
- Normalizes vital sign abnormalities
- Does
not
treat CNS complications of alcohol use or withdrawal
- α-agonist (clonidine):
- Centrally acting α
2
-adrenergic agonists
- Normalizes vital sign abnormalities
- Do
not
treat CNS complications of alcohol use or withdrawal
- Phenytoin:
- Not indicated in seizures primarily due to alcohol withdrawal
- Indicated if seizures secondary to idiopathic epilepsy, posttraumatic, or status epilepticus
MEDICATION
- Dextrose: D
50
W 1 amp (50 mL or 25 g; peds: D
25
W 2–4 mL/kg) IV
- Diazepam (Valium): 5–10 mg IV q5–10min until patient calm
- Lorazepam (Ativan): 0.5–4 mg IV/IM q5–10min until patient calm
- Naloxone (Narcan): 0.4–2 mg (peds: 0.1 mg/kg) IV or IM initial dose
- Phenobarbital: 10–20 mg/kg IV (loading dose) monitor for respiratory depression
- Phenytoin: 15–18 mg/kg not to exceed 25 mg/min:
- May give Fosphenytoin at 15–20 mgPE/kg at a maximum rate of 150 mgPE/min
- Propofol: 25-75 μ/kg/min IV (loading dose) then 5–50 μg/kg/min (maintenance dose)
- Thiamine (vitamin B
1
): 100 mg (peds: 50 mg) IV or IM
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Inability to control seizures or withdrawal symptoms with oral medications
- Hepatic failure, infection, dehydration, malnutrition, cardiovascular collapse, cardiac dysrhythmia, or trauma
- Hallucinations, abnormal vital signs, severe tremors, or extreme agitation
- Wernicke encephalopathy
- Confusion or delirium
Discharge Criteria
- Clinically sober
- Seizure free for 6 hr (with negative workup if 1st seizure)
Issues for Referral
Discuss with social worker and/or police and/or department of family services for pediatric patients.
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Substance abuse referral for patients with recurrent alcohol intoxication/use
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Failure to appreciate AMS due to nonalcoholic causes in chronic alcoholics:
- Serum levels should drop by 15–40 mg/dL/hr
- If mental status not improving (or worsening) need to investigate further
- Failure to adequately treat with benzodiazepines:
- May require massive doses (e.g., 200–300 mg of diazepam) to control
- If unable to control, consider other GABAergic agents (phenobarbital, propofol)
- Failure to appreciate hypoglycemia as a common entity in these patients:
- Can masquerade as “intoxication”
- Can result in poor outcomes
- Frequently occurs in chronic alcoholics and children
ADDITIONAL READING
- D’Onofrio G, Degutis LC. Preventive care in the emergency department: Screening and brief intervention for alcohol problems in the emergency department: A systematic review.
Acad Emerg Med
. 2002;9:627–638.
- Mayo-Smith MF, Beecher LH, Fischer TL, et al. Management of Alcohol Withdrawal Delirium: An Evidence-based Practice Guideline.
Arch Int Med
. 2004;164:1405–1412.
- McKeon A, Frye MA, Delanty N. The Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome.
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry.
2008;79(8):854–862.
- Nelson LS, Gold JA. Chapter 78. Ethanol Withdrawal. In: Hoffman RS, Nelson LS, Goldfrank LR, et al., eds.
Goldfrank’s Toxicologic Emergencies
. 9th ed. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill; 2011.
- Pitzele HZ, Tolia VM. Twenty per hour: Altered mental state due to ethanol abuse and withdrawal.
Emerg Med Clin N Am
. 2010;28:683–705.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)