++
+++
Essentials of Diagnosis
++
Major criteria
Physiologic dependence as evidenced by withdrawal when intake is interrupted
Tolerance to the effects of alcohol
Evidence of alcohol-associated illnesses, such as alcoholic liver disease, cerebellar degeneration
Continued drinking despite strong medical and social contraindications and life disruption
Impairment in social and occupational functioning
Depression
Blackouts
Other signs
Alcohol odor on breath
Alcoholic facies, flushed face
Scleral injection
Tremor
Ecchymoses
Peripheral neuropathy
Surreptitious drinking
Unexplained work absences
Frequent accidents, falls, or injuries
In smokers, cigarette burns on hands or chest
Laboratory tests: elevated values of RBC mean corpuscular volume, serum liver biochemical tests, uric acid, and triglycerides
+++
General Considerations
++
The two-phase syndrome includes at-risk drinking and moderate to severe alcohol misuse
At-risk drinking is the repetitive use of alcohol, often to alleviate anxiety or solve other emotional problems
For men, at-risk drinking is defined as > 4 drinks per day or 14 drinks per week
For women, at-risk drinking is defined as > 3 drinks per day or 7 drinks per week
Moderate to severe alcoholism is similar to that which occurs following the repeated use of other sedative-hypnotics; characterized by
Recurrent use of alcohol despite disruption in social roles (family and work)
Alcohol-related legal problems
Taking safety risks by oneself and with others
Alcoholism is associated with a high prevalence of lifetime psychiatric disorders, especially depression
++
Alcohol is responsible for about 88,000 deaths in the United States each year
Most suicides and intrafamily homicides involve alcohol
Major factor in rapes and other assaults
Male-to-female ratios of 4:1 are converging
Adoption and twin studies indicate genetic factors in causation
Forty percent of Japanese have aldehyde dehydrogenase deficiency, which increases susceptibility to the effects of alcohol
+++
Acute alcohol intoxication
++
Drowsiness, errors of commission, disinhibition, dysarthria, ataxia, and nystagmus
Ataxia, dysarthria, and vomiting indicate a blood level > 150 mg/dL
Severe intoxication: respiratory depression, stupor, seizures, shock syndrome, coma, and death
Serious overdoses often include other sedatives combined with alcohol
Lethal blood levels: 350–900 mg/dL
++
Categorized as mild, moderate, or severe withdrawal, withdrawal seizures, and delirium tremens (DTs)
Symptoms and signs of mild withdrawal
Tremor, anxiety, tachycardia, nausea and vomiting, insomnia
Begin about 6 hours after the last drink and end by day 2
Symptoms and signs of moderate withdrawal fall between those of mild and severe
Symptoms and signs of severe withdrawal
Disorientation, agitation, diaphoresis, whole body tremor, vomiting, hypertension, and hallucinations (visual>tactile>auditory)
Occurs 48–96 hours after the last drink
Usually preceded by prolonged heavy alcohol use
Withdrawal seizures