Alcohol Dependence Syndrome

Occurs when an individual is physically or psychologically dependent upon alcohol

Clinical presentation of alcohol withdrawal

  • First symptoms occur within hours and peak at 24-48 hours
  • Restlessness, tremor, sweating, anxiety, nausea and vomiting, loss of appetite and insomnia
  • Tachycardia and systolic hypertension evident
  • Generalised seizures usually in first 24 hours
  • Can progress to the medical emergency Delirium Tremens
    • 5% of cases
    • Peak onset within 2 days of abstinence
    • Often presents insidiously with night time confusion
    • Confusion, disorientation, agitation, hypertension, fever, visual and auditory hallucinations, paranoid ideation
    • Mortality 2-5% (with medical support - higher without)
  • In most cases symptoms resolve in 5-7 days

Investigations

Meet ICD-10 criteria of dependence:
  • 3 or more present have been present together at some time during the use of previous year:
    • Strong desire or sense of compulsion to take drug
    • Difficulty in controlling use of substance in terms of onset, termination, or level of use
    • Physiological withdrawal state
    • Evidence of tolerance
    • Progressive neglect of other pleasures/interests because of use/effects of substance
    • Persistence with use despite clear evidence of harmful consequences

Management

  • General support - reassurance, advice etc.
  • Benzodiazepines - long acting agents, titrate against severity of symptoms, reduce gradually over 7 days
  • Vitamin supplementation including thiamine as prophylaxis against Wenicke's encephalopathy
    • Must be parenteral
    • Increase dose if Wernicke's suspected
  • Relapse prevention