alcohol withdrawal
Potentially life-threatening autonomic hyperactivity and CNS excitation following cessation of chronic alcohol intake. Management relies on risk stratification (PAWSS) and symptom-triggered benzodiazepines or phenobarbital.
pathophysiology
- Chronic State: Alcohol enhances GABA (inhibitory) and inhibits NMDA/Glutamate (excitatory) tone.
- Cessation: Abrupt removal leads to unopposed excitatory tone autonomic instability, seizures, and delirium.
the kindling effect
Repeated cycles of intoxication and withdrawal lead to progressive neuroplastic changes (permanent upregulation of NMDA).
- Result: Each subsequent withdrawal episode becomes more severe and occurs after less alcohol consumption.
- Clinical Implication: A history of “mild shakes” years ago does not guarantee mild withdrawal now. Previous withdrawal seizures are the strongest predictor of future severe complications.
clinical timeline
| phase | onset (approx.) | clinical features |
|---|---|---|
| Minor Withdrawal | 6–12 hrs | Tremor (“shakes”), anxiety, headache, palpitations, GI upset. |
| Hallucinosis | 12–24 hrs | Visual/tactile hallucinations. Patient remains oriented. |
| Seizures | 12–48 hrs | Generalized tonic-clonic. Usually singular or short burst. |
| Delirium Tremens | 48–96 hrs | Medical Emergency. Agitation, global confusion, disorientation, severe autonomic instability (fever, tachycardia, HTN). 5% mortality. |
risk stratification
Do not rely on gestalt alone. Use the Prediction of Alcohol Withdrawal Severity Scale (PAWSS).
- PAWSS Score < 4 (Low Risk): Eligible for outpatient management (if social supports exist).
- PAWSS Score 4 (High Risk): Requires inpatient management (high risk of seizures/DTs).
- Red Flags for Admission: History of seizures/DTs (Kindling), concurrent acute illness, pregnancy, lack of housing/support.
management: inpatient (severe/high risk)
Standard of Care: Symptom-triggered therapy (CIWA-Ar) is superior to fixed-schedule dosing (reduced treatment duration and total dose).
1. assessment
- CIWA-Ar (Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol, Revised). Goal: Maintain light somnolence/calm (CIWA < 8–10).
2. pharmacotherapy (benzodiazepines)
- Preferred: Diazepam (Valium).
- Why: Long half-life + active metabolites = “auto-taper” effect (smoother withdrawal).
- Dose: 10–20 mg PO q1h PRN until calm.
- Hepatic Impairment: Lorazepam (Ativan).
- Why: No hepatic oxidation required (LOT: Lorazepam, Oxazepam, Temazepam).
- Dose: 1–2 mg PO/SL/IV q1h PRN.
3. the phenobarbital protocol
emerging trend
Phenobarbital is gaining favour in ED/ICU settings due to mechanism offering strong control of acute hyperexcitability (GABA-A agonism + AMPA/Kainate antagonism) and its pharmacokinetics, but there is no evidence that it prevents the long‑term kindling phenomenon
- Pros: Long half-life (3–4 days), linear relationship between dose and serum levels, 100% bioavailability (PO/IV/IM).
- Evidence: 2023 Meta-analysis (Umar et al.) suggests efficacy in ICU settings, though evidence quality remains low/contradictory; requires strict protocol.
- Use: Often reserved for benzodiazepine-refractory withdrawal or as a loading dose strategy in ED.
management: outpatient (mild/low risk)
For PAWSS < 4 and stable social environment.
- First Line (Non-BZD): Gabapentin.
- Evidence: Effective for mild withdrawal; reduces craving/anxiety.
- Dose: Titrate to ~1200 mg/day over first few days, then taper.
- Alternatives: Carbamazepine or Clonidine (adjunct for autonomic symptoms only; does not prevent seizures).
- Benzodiazepines: Generally avoided in outpatient settings due to diversion/sedation risk, unless short strict course provided with daily dispensing.
supportive care & complications
- Thiamine (Vitamin B1):
- Prophylaxis: 200 mg PO daily.
- Suspected Wernicke Encephalopathy (WE): 200–300 mg IV/IM daily x 5 days.
- Rule: Always give Thiamine before (or with) Glucose to prevent precipitating WE in malnourished patients.
- Electrolytes: Aggressively replete Magnesium, Potassium, and Phosphate.
diagnosis check NOT always withdrawal. Keep wide DDx: Sepsis, subdural haematoma, hepatic encephalopathy, toxic alcohol ingestion.
Altered LOC in an alcoholic patient is