Title: ACUTE ALCOHOL INTOXICATION
1ACUTE ALCOHOL INTOXICATION
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2 drinking is a pause from thinking
3Different alcohol poisonings.
- Acute ethanol intoxication
- Acute methanol poisoning.
- Acute ethylene glycol poisoning.
- Acute isopropyl alcohol poisoning
4Acute ethanol intoxication
- Sources
- I. alcoholic drinks
- -beer (3.5-9)
- -stout (4.2)
- -wines (12.5-13.5)
- -spirits (37-40)
- -cider (5.5-8)
- -sparkling or flavored alcoholic drinks
- II. non alcoholic beverages
-
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6- One unit 8 gm of alcohol
- One oz 30ml
- Proof 2ethanol by volume
- One drink 44ml of whiskey(80proof),3-5oz wine
or 12 oz beer. - BAC blood alcohol conc.
- 0.1BAC 100 mg alcohol in 100ml blood.
7pharmacology
- C2H5OH
- Colorless, odourless liquid
- M.Wt - 46
- Vd - 0.54 L/Kg
- 1gm ethyl alcohol 7.1 kcal energy
8Absorption
- GIT ,20 in stomach,rest in small intestine
- 80-90 absorption within 30-60mins.
- Absorption also depends on other factors
- Females attain higher blood alcohol level.
- Inhalation pulmonary vascular bed.
9Distribution elimination
- Distributed to almost every tissue.
- peroxidase-catalase system
- Ethanol
acetadehydeNADH - NAD
- microsomal oxidase system
-
acetate -
- CO2H2O
acetyl coA
10- 1st order to zero order kinetics at 5 mg/
100mlBAC. - 100-125 mg/ kg /hr
- BAC decreases by 15-25 mg /100ml/ hr.
- 2-10 unchanged in urine.
- Appreciable but insignificant amount in
respiration.
11pathophysiology
- GABA. Glutamate.
- ?NAD/NAD ratio.
- ?ketogenesis.
- ?gluconeogenesis
- ?glycogenolysis
- Fluid electrolyte imbalance.
12Stages of intoxication
- BAC STAGES
- 0.01-0.05 sobriety
- 0.03-0.12 euphoria
- 0.09-0.25 excitement
- 0.18-0.30 confusion
13-
- 0.27-0.4 stupour
- 0.35-0.5 coma
- 0.45 DEATH
14Asscociated acute problems.
- Alcoholic ketoacidosis.
- Alcoholic hypoglycemia.
- Fluid electrolyte imbalance.
- Wernickes encephalopathy.
15- Acute effects on heart.
- Acute GI efects.
- Acute alcoholic myopathy.
- Trauma
- Associated other substance poisoining.
16Alcoholic ketoacidosis
- Dillon et al
- High anion gap acidosis
- Normal or low glucose level
- Chronic alcoholics
- Binge drinking wks before symptoms
- Dehydration, starvation due to vomiting
,gastritis -
-
17- Alcohol poor food intake
dehydration - ? ?
? - Acetaldehyde glycogenolysis
?counter -
regulatory - ?
hormones - Acetate ?
? - ?
- ?NADH/NAD
?glucagon - ratio
?insulin - ?
- ?gluconeogenesis
ketogenesis
18- Altered mental status
-
- Kussumal breathing
-
- Ketotic breath
- Lab finding
- high anion gap acidosis
- ?beta hydroxybutyrateacetoacetate
- ?insulin level
- Exclude other causes of ?AG acidosis
19Alcoholic hypoglycemia
- Chronic street alcoholic found unresponsive
- Symptoms
- neuroglycopenic ?confusion,fatigue,seizure,
- loss of
consciousness?death - autonomic responses ? palpitation ,tremor
, -
sweating - Signs
- pallor ,diaphoresis
- tachycardia,raised systolic B.P
- transient focal neurological signs
-
-
20Water and electrolytes disorders
- all alcoholics are dehydrated is false.
- Immediate ? in urine volume followed by ?ADH.
- Hydration also depends on
- -diet,nonalcoholic fluids,type of
drinks - -vomiting, diarrhea,infection
- Water intoxication hyponatremia in severe
chronic alcoholics?seizure altered sensorium - Central pontine mylenolysis
21Other electrolytes abnormalities
- Hypomagnesemia
-
- Hypophosphatemia
- Hpokalemia
- Hypocalcemia
22Wernicke-korsakoffs syndrome
- As high as 12.5 in alcoholics.
- Major reversible cause of death.
- If untreated 10-20 mortality rate.
- Thiamine deficiency is the root cause.
- Magnesium deficiency in thiamin resistant cases.
- Clinical features
- global confusion
- ocular abnormalities
- ataxia
23Acute effect on heart
- Direct negative inotropic effect vasodilation.
- PR QT prolongation
- Both supraventricular venntricular arrythmia.
- holiday heart syndrome
- Various degree of heart block.
- ve correlation between and sudden cardiac death.
24Acute alcoholic myopathy
- Acute muscle necrosis mainly in binge drinkers
- Alcoholism is the most common cause of
rhabdomyelisis - Raised CKMM,myoglobinuria,
- Acute tubular necrosis??urea ,creatinine
- Conservative management
25Acute gastrointestinal effect
- Acute gastritis esophagitis.
- Epigastric distress and gastrointesinal bleeding.
- Mallory-weiss tear.
- Acute hepatitis pancreatitis.
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27Differential diagnosis in acutely intoxicated
patient.
- Toxic
- Metabolic
- Infectious diseases
- Neurologic
- Miscellaneous
- Trauma
-
28Management
- Airway
- Breathing
- Circulation
- Intubate if poor gag reflex
- Fingerstick glucose , iv dextrose
- Thiamin 100 mg im/ iv stat.
- magnesium
29- 2 mg naloxone
- Exclude other causes of intoxication
- ABG
- Osmolar gap.
- 2Na BUN/2.8 Glu/18 Eth/4.6
- Serum electrolytes
- Anion gap.
- Correct other electrolyte abnormalities
- Dilantin
- CT scan.
30- Blood alcohol conc (BAC)
- Enhanced elimination
- evacuation after 1 hr little
benefit - activated charcoal.
- fructose
- haemodialysis
- metadoxine (300-900mg iv)
31Methanol poisoning
- CH3OH(wood alcohol)
- Solvent ,antifreeze, paint remover.
- Epidemics of methanol toxicity.
- Poisoning mainly by ingestion
32- Methanol NAD
formaldehyde -
NADH - ( alcohol dehydrogenase)
-
-
formate -
(folate) -
CO2 H2O
33Clinical effects
- Inebriated but lack of euphoria.
- 1-72 hrs of latent period.
- Fatal dose 60-240 ml.
- Vertigo ,nausea,vomiting, diarrhea,abdominal
pain,dyspnea,agitation. - Blurred vision,photophobia,? visual acuity
- Bradycardia, blindness, seizures,coma.
34- Physical examination
- constricted visual field,fixed dilated
pupils, - retinal edema hyperemia of disk
-
- resp apnea ,opisthotonus, seizure in pts
dying of -
Methanol intoxication
35- Lab finding
- high anion gap acidosis (correlates with
-
mortality) - high osmolar gap
- serum methanolgt 20 mg/dl symptoms
- gt 50 mg/ dl
serious - gt 100 mg/ dl
ocular signs
36- Specific treatment
- aggressive tt of acidosis
- ethanol
- achieve BAC of 100- 150mg /100ml
- loading 0.8gm/ kg of 5 10
ethanol - followed by 130mg/kg/hr.
- oral loading if no iv preparation
- if dialysis,250-350 mg/kg/hr.
- ethanol indications
- methanol gt20 mg/100ml,symptomatic
- acidosis, need for HD.
- ingestion gto.4ml/kg
-
37- Folic acid 30 mg iv every 4 hrly
- Leucovorin 1-2mg/kg iv
- 4-methyl pyrazole(fomepizole ) 15-20 mg/kg iv
- Haemodialysis not haemoperfusion
- Haemodialysis indications
- methanolgt20-50mg/100ml
- acidosis not responsive to bicarbonate
- formate levels gt 20 mg/100ml
- visual impairment
- renal impairement
- Dialysis till methanol level0mg/100ml and
acidosis clears.
38Ethylene glycol poisoning
- Colourless, odourless ,nonvolatile,water soluble.
- Paints,polishes, cosmetics,antifreeze.
- Viscous sweet poormans substitute for
alcohol. - Minimal lethal dose 1-1.5ml/kg.
- Peak level 1-4 hr.
39- Eth glycol NAD glycoldehyde
NADH - alc dehydrogenase
-
-
glycolate - lactate
- oxalate
glyoxylate - hypocalcemia
- renal failure
- myocardial deprssion
-
40Clinical effects
- Described by pons custer
- Stage 1 inebriated without odour of alcohol.
- (1-12hrs) other CNS symptoms.
- Stage 2-- CVS changes
- (12-24 hrs)
- Stage3-- ARF
- (24-72 hrs)
41- Lab finding
- oxalate crystals in urine.
- hypocalcemia
- ?A G acidosis
- tt mainly on history clinical symptoms.
- Specific treatment
- ethanol
- pyridoxine
- thiamine
- magnesium
- 4-methyl pyrazole
- HD
42Isopropyl alcohol poisoning
- 2-propanol,isopropanol.
- Clear, volatile ,bitter taste,aromatic odour
- Solvent, disinfectant.
- 2nd to ethanol as most commonly ingested alcohol.
43- Twice potent than ethanol as CNS depressant.
- Toxic dose--- 1ml/kg of 70 solution.
- Lethal dose---2-4ml/kg.
- 80 absorbed from GIT in 30 mins.
- Dermal absorption inhalation.
44- isopropyl alcohol
acetone - alc dehydrogenase
-
-
acetate -
formate - Very few ketoacids
- CNS depressant.
- NAD/NADH ratio ?ed.
45- Clinical effects
- within 30-60 mins.
-
- lacking euphoria
- nausea,vomiting,haemorrhgic gastritis.
- ocular signs
- sweet ,pungent odor of acetone
- coma, hypoventilation resp
arrest
46- Diagnosis
- inebriated with ve or low ethanol.
- elevated osmolar gap
- ketosis without acidosis
- gt50mg/dl toxic,200-400mg/dl lethal.
- Treatment
- GI evacuation.
- dialysis if 3-4 ml /kg of 70
solution - blood level gt400mg/dl
- unrespnsive
hypotension - renal failure,coma.
47Anesthetic management in acute alcohol
intoxicated pts.
- acute problems
- altered sensorium poor assesment.
- .
- fluid electrolytes derangements.
- acid base disorders
- full stomach aspiration.
-
48- hypothermia.
- consent.
- ?MAC of anesthetic gases analgesia.
- multiple trauma with airway involvement.
- Problems due to chronic alchoholism
- hypoproteinemia
- liver dysfunction.
- cardiomyopathy.
- haematological abnormalities.
- increase infections
-
49- other substance abuser.
- HIV ,hepatitis.
- Altered drug metabolism
- CYP2E1 .
- long term consumption induces MEOS.
- ?metabolism of certain drugs.
- conversion of many foreign substances
into highly - toxic metabolites.
- perianesthetic plasma fluoride kinetics.
- short term consumption has opposite
effects.
50- Unpredictable awakening from anaesthesia
- Withdrawal syndrome in postop period.
- Long term hospitization.
51Alcohol withdrawal syndrome in surgical patients.
- chronic alcohol misuse is more common in surgical
patients(upto 43 in ENT pts) than in
psychiatric(30) or neurological (19) pts. - Almost half of all trauma beds are occupied by
patients who were injured while under the
influence of alcohol. - Normal postoperative course into life threatening
situation.
52- Hangover tremors,nausea,vomiting.
- weakness, irritability,
insomnia. - Delirium tremens 2-4 days of complete abstinence
- disorientation
- poor attention span.
- visual auditary
hallucination. - marked autonomic
disturbances. - respiratory cardiovascular
collapse. - death.
-
53- Rum fits
- 12-48 hrs after aheavy bout of drinking.
- multiple seizures 2-6 at a time.
- sometimes status epilepticus.
- Alcoholic hallucinosis
- auditory hallucinations.
- clear consciousness.
54- Recognition of alcohol misuse in surgical pts.
-
- - history physical examination.
- -CAGE questionnaire.
- -laboratory markers
- CDT, GGT, MCV.
55- Revised clinical institute withdrawal
assesment(CIWA)for alcohol scale. - nausea vomiting
- tremor
- anxiety
- agitation
- tactile disturbances
- auditory disturbances
- visual disturbances
- headache/fullness in head.
- orientation/clouding of consciousness .
56- Treatment of alcohol misuse in ward pts..
- prophylaxis.
- 1st line tt diezepam, lorazepam,
chlordizepoxide - alternative chlormethimazole, ethanol.
-
- therapy
- establish diagnosis CIWA score
- CIWA score gt20 ICU start
treatment. - 10-20 start
treatment - lt10 watch
-
57- Start with benzodiazepines.
-
- symptom-triggered regimen.
-
- fixed schedule regimen
- Additional medications as needed
- beta blockers, clonidine, haloperidol.
-
- Monitor pt every 4hr by CIWA score.
58- Intravenous tt for AWS in surgical ICU pts.
- prophylaxis
- start with benzodiazepines
- add additional medications.
- monitor every hr by CIWA score.
- maintain score lt10 for 24 hrs.
- therapy
- start with benzodiazepines
- add additional medications.
- titrate medications to decrease score
lt10. - monitor every hr by CIWA score.
- until lt10 for 24 hrs.
-
59- WISHING U
- HAPPY VALENTINE DAY
-
- LOVE MAY B LESS INJURIOUS THAN
-
ALCOCHOL
60thank You
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