🔑 Key Learning
- Alcohol withdrawal occurs due to rebound CNS excitation following loss of GABAergic and NMDA antagonism
- Delirium tremens is a severe complication with coarse tremor, hallucinations and delirium.
- Benzodiazepines are first-line for alcohol withdrawal management, guided by symptom severity scoring (e.g. CIWA) - diazepam, chlordiazepoxide
- Korsakoff dementia is a late complication of chronic thiamine deficiency — characterised by memory loss, anterograde amensia and confabulation
🧬 Alcohol Withdrawal
Pathophysiology
- Alcohol enhances GABA activity and inhibits NMDA glutamate receptors → overall CNS depression
-
Withdrawal causes:
- ↓ GABA activity → CNS hyperexcitability
- ↑ NMDA activity → disinhibition and agitation
đź‘€ Clinical Features
-
Symptoms begin 6–12 hours after last drink, peak at ~36 hours
- Tremor
- Tachycardia
- Sweating
- Confusion and agitation
-
Delirium tremens (48–72 hours)
- Coarse tremor
- Confusion, delusions
- Visual or tactile hallucinations
- Autonomic instability
đź’Š Management
- Symptom-guided approach using CIWA (Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol) scale
-
Benzodiazepines are first-line
- Chlordiazepoxide
- Diazepam
- Some protocols now use alcohol-based regimens (e.g. supervised drinking on medical wards) — varies by trust
đź§ Korsakoff Dementia
Pathophysiology
- Due to thiamine (vitamin B1) deficiency
- Associated with haemorrhage and neuronal loss in the mammillary bodies of the thalamus and hypothalamus
-
Often follows an episode of Wernicke’s encephalopathy. Triad of:
- Ophthalmoplegia
- Confusion
- Ataxia
đź‘€ Clinical Features
- Anterograde amnesia – inability to form new memories
- Retrograde amnesia – loss of past memories
- Confabulation – fabrication of stories to fill memory gaps
- May have accompanying peripheral neuropathy
📝 Exam Clues & Clinchers
- Tremor + tachycardia + confusion 6–12 hours after last drink → think alcohol withdrawal
- Visual hallucinations + coarse tremor + agitation at 72 hours → classic for delirium tremens
- CIWA score → 1st line: chlordiazepoxide or diazepam
- Memory loss + confabulation in a chronic alcoholic → think Korsakoff’s syndrome
- Wernicke’s encephalopathy (confusion, ataxia, ophthalmoplegia) may precede Korsakoff’s
- Always give parenteral thiamine (B1) before glucose in at-risk patients