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Ethanol Abuse and Toxic Alcohol Ingestion Chris Hall, PGY-5 McMaster University U of C Academic Day August 2, 2007 Objectives Approach to the “intoxicated” patient Pharmacology of alcohols Common clinical scenarios in EtOH Diagnostic and management challenges of toxic alcohols ***Case-based and evidence-centred Case #1 56 yo male “Known alcoholic” Unresponsive on park bench No witnesses; no apparent trauma “Smells of alcohol” as per EMS Case #1 Afebrile, HR 102, BP 140/85, RR 22, O2 sat 91% CBS: 5.5 Neuro: GCS 11; moves 4 limbs Sonorous resps; Gag present Chest: scattered crackles Abdo, extremities: WNL Case #1 Any additional information you’d like? What is your working Dx? How will you proceed from this point? The “Intoxicated” Patient VITAMIN CDE AEIOU TIPS “Intracranial” vs. “Extracranial” The “Intoxicated” Patient Intracranial Seizures Vascular Infectious Neoplastic Traumatic Extracranial O2 / CO2 Infectious Toxins / WD Metab. / Endo. Environmental The “Intoxicated” Patient Reasonable DDx for Case #1: – – – – – – Ethanol / other co-ingestions Head trauma CNS / other infection Hypoglycemia / AKA Wernicke encephalopathy Alcohol withdrawal (+/- seizures) Immediate Action Airway / Breathing Hemodynamic stability Reversible causes – The “Coma Cocktail” (?!) Further Management History and P/E Investigations – Which ones? Case #1 TAKE HOME MESSAGE: – DO NOT assume EtOH to be the cause of the “intoxicated” patient’s presentation – Keep the differential broad; systematic approach to eliminate other DDx Ethanol: Pharmacology Alcoholic Trivial Pursuit What is “100-proof alcohol”? – 50% EtOH by weight Alcoholic Trivial Pursuit What is considered “one alcoholic drink”? – 15g of EtOH » 1 oz 50% (liquor) » 4 oz 12% (wine) » 10 oz 5% (beer) Alcoholic Trivial Pursuit How much EtOH would a 70kg male need to drink to reach an EtOH level of 30 mmol/L? a) b) c) d) e) 3 5 7 9 11 Alcoholic Trivial Pursuit TRUE OR FALSE: – Men are less susceptible to acute alcohol intoxication – Caffeine masks EtOH intoxication – Prickly pear is an antidote for veisalgia – Hydration accelerates metabolism of EtOH – Intoxication is lessened by co-ingesting food Pharmacology EtOH rapidly absorbed – Stomach and small bowel – Multifactorial effects on rate » Food » GI disease » Meds (gastric emptying) » Idiopathic Pharmacology EtOH metabolized by ADH and ALDH – Stomach and liver; 5-10% unchanged via urine – Gender / ethnic differences in metabolism – Rate: 3-4mM/h (non-drinker) up to 7.5mM/h (chronic drinker) Ethanol: Metabolism Clinical Presentation CNS Effects: – GABA Agonism + NMDA Antagonism » Inebriation, poor impulse control, ataxia » “Set-up” for withdrawal CVS Effects: – Vasodilation, reduced CO – Dysrhythmias Clinical Presentation GI Effects: – N/V/D volume loss – Pancreatitis, gastritis, hepatitis – GI Bleeding Metabolic Effects: – HypoNa, Hypoglycemia – osmol gap; no anion gap – Ketonemia after binges Clinical Presentation Hematologic Effects: – Anemia ( MCV) – Thrombocytopenia – Lymphopenia Case #2 46 yo male CC: “Unwell” HR: 115, BP 165/100, RR 25, sat 100% Tremulous Sweaty Alert, not confused Exam otherwise WNL Case #2 Discuss: – Your working / differential diagnoses – Your initial management and approach to this patient Alcohol Withdrawal GABA receptor downregulation + NMDA receptor upregulation Anxiety, sweating, tremor, autonomic overdrive, altered LOC, seizures Generally in chronic abusers Spectrum of Illness Simple Withdrawal Alcoholic Hallucinosis Withdrawal Seizures Delirium Tremens Alcohol Withdrawal: Rx Holbrook et al (CMAJ 1999) – Metaanalysis of WD Rx – BZD vs placebo or other Rx – BZD better than placebo » More successful outcomes » Less likely to drop out of Rx – Unable to properly pool results otherwise Choice of BZD? Ritson et al, (Drug Alc Dependence 1986) – RCT; N=40 – Standing lorazepam vs diazepam – Less anxiety; smoother course with valium Choice of BZD? Diazepam is the traditional choice Lorazepam is preferred in patients with severe liver disease Benzodiazepines Dosing – Diazepam: 5 mg iv / 10 mg po q 10 min – Lorazepam: 1-2 mg iv / 2 mg po q 15 min » NB: longer time of onset; beware dose stacking – Titrate to effect » (But how?) CIWA 10-item scale Min score = 0, Max score = 67 Score < 8 considered mild withdrawal (Rx threshold) Takes 5 min to complete Symptom-Guided Rx 2002 Arch Int Med & 1994 JAMA: – 2 RCTs – CIWA-guided Rx reduces BZD use, length of Rx vs. standing BZD protocol Guide therapy with symptoms; avoid standing dosing schedules Do not fear huge doses Adjunctive Rx Carbamazepine – 2 RCTs (Am J Psych 1989; J Gen Int Med 2002) » Similar to BZD in Rx of withdrawal symptoms Valproate – 1 RCT (Alc Clin Exp Res 2001) » Less BZD needed when Rx with VA Simple Withdrawal: Rx Adjuncts, cont’: – Beta Blockers – Clonidine – Haldol – Magnesium Withdrawal: Disposition RCT (NEJM, 1989) – CIWA < 15; no comorbidities – Outpatient Rx as safe as Inpatient Rx, cost less, lasted less time – Inpatients more likely to complete Rx – Outpatients got daily follow-up and BZD dosing Withdrawal: Disposition Discharge home if: – Mild withdrawal at time of d/c (CIWA < 8 - 15 after 4-6 h observation) – Easily controlled w/ BZD – Not intoxicated – Responsible supervision preferred – No prior hx of seizures or DT Case #2 ,Part 2 BZD sedation is ordered for the patient 60 min later, patient is more tremulous, agitated While trying to get out of bed, has generalized T/C sz Case #2, Part 2 What are your initial steps? How will you treat this patient? Withdrawal Seizures Usually GTC, self-terminating 15-25% have > 1 seizure – < 8% go into status May herald onset of DT Seizure Management ABCs Rule out reversible causes Lorazepam likely longer anticonvulsant effect than diazepam Seizure Management BZD (e.g. Ativan 2-4 mg iv) Phenobarbital 15-20 mg/kg Propofol / Midazolam / Pentobarb Inhalational Anaesthesia, paralysis, EEG monitoring What about Dilantin? EBM (Ann Emerg Med 1991 & 1994): – 2 RCTs; 55 & 147 patients – No difference in relapse of seizures vs placebo Mechanism of action unlikely to affect seizures in EtOH withdrawal Likely to have little impact on Rx Withdrawal Seizures Some Questions to ponder: – Who can be released from the ED? – When is a CT Head warranted? – When should patients start an anticonvulsant? CT Head New / changed seizures Focal seizure Focal examination / meningismus Failure to recover usual mental status Mental status out of proportion to EtOH Recent head trauma +/- fever (prior to LP?) Disposition Normal workup and exam Single seizure Withdrawal well-controlled Not intoxicated Adequate supervision / follow-up Starting an Anticonvulsant Controversial Seizure may be due to withdrawal or may represent underlying epileptic d/o Generally, leave it to neurology! Case #3 60 yo male “Alcoholic” by own report 2-week “binge” until yesterday Since then, N/V, AP, “dizziness & blurred vision” Case #3 HR 114, BP 105/60, RR 28, sat 100% CBS: 3.0 Chest: clear Neuro: slightly drowsy; no focality; no tremor Abdo: tender epigastrium Urine dip: negative for ketones, blood, WBC Case #3 Working diagnosis / differential? Approach to management? Metabolic Derangements in EtOH Hypoglycemia Hyponatremia, hypokalemia Hypomagnesemia, hypocalcemia Ketoacidosis Wernicke Encephalopathy / Korsakoff Amnesia Ketoacidosis Pathophysiology – NADH:NAD ratio – Loss of EtOH block of ketogenesis – Starvation Ketoacidosis Presentation: – Recent EtOH binge – Dehydrated, N/V, abdo pain – High AG acidosis – Ketonuria w/o glucosuria Ketoacidosis Diagnosis – Rule out other causes of AG acidosis – Assess for underlying medical illness » Infection, AMI – Beware relying on urine dipstick Ketoacidosis Ketoacidosis Management – Thiamine replacement » Needed for pyruvate Krebs Cycle – Mg replacement » Cofactor for thiamine – IVF rehydration – Dextrose / Glucose replacement – HCO3 in severe acidosis (e.g. pH < 7.1) Hypoglycemia Causes: – Starvation (during binge) – Hepatic glycogen depletion – Impaired gluconeogensis May be a sentinel phenomenon prior to onset of AKA Treated with glucose, thiamine, magnesium Differential Diagnosis? Thiamine Deficiency Chronic Alcoholism – Malnutrition – Vomiting – Malabsorption Other Chronic Illnesses – Chronic vomiting (AIDS, hyperthyroidism, hypermesis gravidarum) – Dialysis – Long-term Lasix use Thiamine Deficiency “Beri Beri” – “Dry” beri beri = neurologic disease » Wernicke encephalopathy » Korsakoff amnesia – “Wet” beri beri = cardiovascular disease » CHF / DCM » More often in countries w/o thiamine supplements Wernicke’s Encephalopathy Classic Presentation – EOM palsy – Ataxia – Altered LOC / cognition ***(only 12% of patients have all 3) • Other Sx: • Hypothermia • DTRs Korsakoff’s Amnesia Presentation – Memory impairment – Unable to learn / remember new facts – Apathy – Confabulation ***May be abrupt or insidious onset Treatments Thiamine – 100mg iv; repeat prn to 1000mg – 100-200mg po/day – Concern for anaphylaxis? Magnesium Abstinence Prognosis Wernicke’s: – 25% recover well – 50% some recovery – 25% poor recovery – Almost 80% chance of Korsakoff’s in the future Case #4 15 yo female Recent dispute with parents; last seen 4 hrs prior Found unresponsive in garage by father Brought to a rural ED via EMS with this container… Case #4 Afebrile, HR 105, BP 100/40, RR 25, sat 100% CBS 5.5 Chest, Abdomen WNL GCS 6; PERL 5mm Bidirectional nystagmus No evidence of head trauma or IVDU Neck supple Case #4 Electrolytes: – Na 139, Cl 95, HCO3 14, K 3.9, Glc 5.5 CBC: Normal Renal: BUN 5.1, CR 115, Osm 320 VBG: pH 7.20 / pCO2 30 Case #4 What is your working diagnosis? Your differential? Any additional testing which may be helpful? – Any simple tests to help confirm a toxic alcohol ingestion? Ethylene Glycol Sources: – Radiator antifreeze Metabolism: – Sequential oxidation via ADH / ALDH pathway – Multiple toxic metabolites – Glycolic acid causes wide AG acidosis Ethylene Glycol Ethylene Glycol Presentation – – – – Renal failure w/ crystalluria Intoxication, seizures Hypocalcemia, long QT, dysrhythmias Opthalmoplegia, nystagmus Calcium Oxalate Crystals Approx. 60% Sens Methanol Sources: – – – – Model airplane fuel Gas line antifreeze Windshield washer fluid Photocopying fluid Metabolism: – ADH / ALDH – Formate is toxic Methanol Methanol Presentation – – – – – – Visual changes (“snowstorm”) N/V, AP, Pancreatitis Hypothermia Altered LOC, seizures Acute renal failure Bilateral basal ganglia lesions (CT Head) Diagnostic Testing Toxic Alcohol levels – Often not available immediately – May be falsely low – Use of “Toxic” level is misleading Diagnostic Testing Anion Gap – Na – (HCO3 + Cl) – “Norm = 7 +/- 4 mEq/l – Rises as toxic alcohol metabolized » Due to Glycolate (EG) or Formate (MeOH) Diagnostic Testing Anion Gap, cont’ – – – – Lacks sensitivity (absent early on) Lacks specificity (MUDPILES CAT) Cannot rule in / out toxic alcohol poisoning BUT Very high values highly suggestive of serious underlying disease / ingestion Diagnostic Testing Osmolar Gap – OG = Osmmeasured – Osmcalculated – (Osmcalculated = 2 x Na + BUN + Glc) – “Norm” is disputed » Classic = 10 +/- 6 » More recent = 5 +/- 10 (or –2 +/- 6, etc…) – Rises as EG is absorbed; drops as EG metabolized Osmolar vs Anion Gap Diagnostic Testing Osmolar Gap – Lacks sensitivity (can be “normal” with fatal ingestion) – Lacks specificity » EtOH, MeOH, EG, Isoprop., Mannitol – Cannot rule out / in toxic alcohol ingestion – BUT very high value (> 50) is suggestive Diagnostic Testing Evaluate the following: – Na 135, Bun 6.7, Glc 7.8 – Osm 342 – EtOH 55 Does this add up? What does this imply? EtOH and the Osmolar Gap EtOH : OG ratio is ~ 1.25 : 1 – (Purssell et al Ann Emerg Med, 2001) Residual difference does not necessarily mean toxic alcohol Large discrepancy is suggestive Lack of discrepancy doesn’t rule out toxic alcohol EtOH and the Osmolar Gap Contribution of EtOH to clinical toxicity: – Affinity of ADH for EtOH 67x higher than EG & 15x higher than MeOH – EtOH is protective – Levels > 20mmol/L make toxic alcohol unlikely cause of wide AG acidosis Management: Overview ABC Decontamination ADH inhibition Adjunctive measures Decontamination Is activated charcoal appropriate in this patient? – Why / why not? Are any decontamination modalities of value in toxic alcohols? ADH Inhibition EtOH – – – – “Occupies” ADH Blocks toxic alcohol metabolism May be difficult to find / prepare Requires load and infusion ADH Inhibition Indications: (AACT Guidelines) – Documented level (>7.5 MeOH / >4 EG) – Documented ingestion and OG > 10 – Suspected ingestion and 2 of: » pH < 7.3 » HCO3 < 20 » OG > 10 » Urinary oxalate crystals ADH Inhibition EtOH – Adverse Effects: » Obtundation / inebriation » Respiratory depression » Hypotension » Hyponatremia / glycemia » Gastritis / pancreatitis » Phlebitis (infusion site) ADH Inhibition EtOH: – Dosing: » 5-10% IV solution (preferably CVL) » Load: 8cc/kg over 30-60 min » Infusion: ~45cc/hr (70 kg person) » Goal: EtOH of ~20mmol/L or molar ratio of 1:4 (whichever greater) » Monitor Glc, Na ADH Inhibition Fomepizole – Inhibits ADH – Advantages: » Avoid essentially all S/E of EtOH » Q12h dosing – Disadvantages: » COST Fomepizole: EBM Brent et al. (NEJM 1999): – Case series (N=19) of EG poisoning » Reduction in acidosis, serum glycolate and urinary oxaluria » Preservation of renal function (if normal initially) » No comparison to EtOH » 1 patient died – “Safe and effective” Fomepizole: EBM Brent et al. (NEJM 2001): – Case series (N=11) in MeOH toxicity » Reduction in formate levels » Improvement in acidosis » No patients with significant S/E » No comparison with EtOH » 2 patients died – “Safe and effective” Fomepizole Indications: – Same as for EtOH – Institutional preference (COST) Continue dosing until “non-toxic” level and not acidotic – MeOH ~ 7.5 mmol/L; EG ~ 4 mmol/L Hemodialysis Eliminates toxic alcohols Can address toxin plus electrolyte or acidbase disturbance Not always necessary if ADH inhibited; may serve to shorten duration of Rx Hemodialysis Indications (AACT Guidelines) – Acidosis – Renal Failure – End organ damage » Visual changes, coma, seizures – Methanol > 15 / EG > 8 (controversial) – Electrolyte or vital sign disturbance unresponsive to usual Rx Hemodialysis HD may be withheld if – ADH inhibited – No acidosis – No clinical indications for dialysis (NB: will prolong duration of Rx) Adjuncts Methanol: – Bicarbonate – Folinic acid Ethylene glycol: – Thiamine – Pyridoxine Sodium Bicarbonate Mechanism – Shifts formic acid to formate (less toxic) – “Ion trapping” in urine Indications – pH < 7.15 (Goldfrank) - 7.3 (AACT) – May consider in EG and significant acidosis Folinic Acid Reduced form of Folic Acid Mechanism: – Formic acid metabolism Indications: – All MeOH ingestions Thiamine / Pyridoxine Mechanism: – Encourage glycoxylic acid metabolism to nontoxic compounds Indications: – Consider in any EG ingestion Case #5 59 yo male Found outside homeless shelter Decreased LOC Hematemesis / Hemoptysis Sweet odor on breath Empty bottle found next to patient Case #5 HR 105, BP 130/75, RR 10, sat 91% Chest: scattered crackles Abdomen: epigastric tenderness GCS 10, PERL 3mm Urine: – dip 3+ RBC, 3+ ketones – microscopy normal Case #5 CBC: Hb 100, otherwise WNL Na 139, Cl 100, HCO3 25, K 3.0 BUN 8.0, CR 129 Glc 8.1 Serum ketones present Osmolarity 320 Ethanol: undetectable Case #5: What is your diagnosis / differential? What further testing would you like to do? What is your management at this time? Isopropanol Source: – “Rubbing alcohol” Clinical: – Significant inebriation » NB: IP ~ EG > EtOH > MeOH – Hemorrhagic gastritis / tracheobronchitis – Acetone odor – Rhabdomyolysis Isopropanol: Metabolism Isopropanol Investigations: – – – – “Ketosis without acidosis” No anion gap Osmolar gap present Urine may show myoglobinuria Management Secure ABC’s Address complications – Gastritis, tracheobronchitis, rhabdomyolysis Usually no specific interventions – HD shortens half-life Bonus: Case #6 Case #6 47 yo male Drinking at a bar, involved in altercation Struck in side of head with bottle ~ 30 sec LOC No vomiting, headache, seizure activity Case #6 All VS WNL GCS 15; patient slurring speech, slightly ataxic No focal neurologic weakness 3 cm laceration on vertex No spinal tenderness Patient is requesting to leave the ED Case #6 Main Issues: – Does this patient require imaging? – What is the physician’s obligation regarding the patient’s request to leave? Head Trauma and EtOH Confounding Issues – Higher risk of brain injury with same mechanism – Intoxication clouds assessment – Direct toxicity of EtOH on injured brain – Patients often not cooperative – Time / resource constraints Head Trauma and EtOH New Orleans CT Head Rule (NEJM 2000) – EtOH an independent predictor of risk of positive CT – OR = 3.2 – LR(+) = 11.3 – Conclusion: image all “intoxicated” patients Head Trauma and EtOH Canadian CT Head Rule (Lancet 2001) – “Acute intoxication” not included among variables – Intoxicated patients not excluded (but unclear how many included) – “Suspected chronic alcoholism” not predictive – Conclusion: “No comment” Head Trauma and EtOH Retrospective review of NEXUS II data (Ann Emerg Med, 2007) – Suggests over-imaging in intoxicated patients – “Intoxication” not predictive of positive CT head – Conclusion: weak evidence of utility of NEXUS II CDR in intoxicated patients Head Trauma and EtOH Summary of Evidence: – No strong evidence to guide imaging choice – Evidence highlights increased risk but likely overuse of CT Head – Bottom line: clinical judgment required; CDR (CCR, NEXUS II) may help Summary Ethanol – Major cause of morbidity / mortality – Withdrawal may be a medical emergency – Most of Rx is supportive / directed towards medical complications – Never forget to search for other causes of “intoxication” Summary Toxic Alcohols – Can be difficult to detect – Have significant direct toxicity (highly lethal) – Main Rx is directed towards ADH inhibition and serum clearance The End Any questions?