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ALCOHOLISM
IN
NEUROLOGY
-Dr. Sachin Adukia
 Acute alcoholic intoxication
 Alcohol withdrawal
 Withdrawal seizures
 Alcohol hallucinosis
 Delirium tremens
 Nutritional deficiencies:
 Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome.
 Alcoholic polyneuropathy.
 Pellagra.
 Neurological complication of uncertain etiology:
 Alcoholic cerebellar degeneration
 Central pontine myelinolysis
 Marchiafava-Bignami disease
 Alcoholic amblyopia
 Encephalopathy:
 Hepatic encephalopathy
 Trauma:
 SDH
 Post stroke epilepsy
 Others:
 Stroke
 brain tumors
 Headache
 Hypoglycemia
 Alcohol
 facilitates inhibitory neurotransmitter GABA
 and inhibits excitation induced by NMDA
 It has effects on opioid, dopamine, and serotonin systems
 Sustained heavy consumption casues dependency and increased tolerance with
 reduced sensitivity to GABA
 increased sensitivity to NMDA
 Blood alcohol concentrations reflect rate of intake, degree of tolerance.
 Extreme intoxication (>300 mg/100 ml)
 increasing drowsiness and then coma
 depressed tendon reflexes
 hypotension, hypothermia, and slowed respiration
 Alcohol concentrations >400 mg/100 ml.
 Death may occur
 At < 400 mg/100 ml, look for alternative cause for coma
 head injury, other drug usage
 hypoglycemia, meningitis
 At a cellular level daily alcohol intake induces
 functional increase in NMDA receptor levels- excitatory
 When alcohol is stopped
 these excess receptors cause large calcium flux into cells,
hyperexcitability, and cell death.
 alcohol mediated inhibitory action of GABA reduces
 Increase in excitatory glutamate and drop inhibitory GABA give
noradrenergic ‘‘overdrive’’- sympathetic overactivity.
Alcohol-withdrawal syndrome
 with a long history of sustained alcohol use
 Symptoms after 4 -12 hrs after last consumption, may start upto 48 to 72 hrs esp.
delirium
 Initial symptoms –
 insomnia, anxiety, tremulousness, palpitations, diaphoresis
 Can appear even when significant alcohol level in blood is present.
 Minor symptoms - self-limited, symptoms peaking and resolving within 72 hours.
 Moderate to severe - urgent medical attention as they are complicated by
 withdrawal seizures
 alcoholic hallucinosis,
 delirium tremens- DT
Alcohol-withdrawal seizures
 Usually GTCS, occuring between 12 -48 hours from the last drink
 either a single seizure or brief flurry, usually self limiting
 Age group- Chronic alcoholics, 4th or 5th decade
 Status epilepticus –rare, but rates upto 9 - 25% observed
 Outcome more favourable, but recovery may be compounded by prolonged
post-ictal state.
 Investigation for structural, metabolic, infectious causes if:
 status epilepticus
 focal seizures
 or focal deficits in the postictal state
 recurrent or prolonged seizures require Rx.
Withdrawal seizures
 Diagnosis
 presence of other symptoms of alcohol withdrawal
 h/o recent alcohol misuse.
 ?? genetic susceptibility +
 Other factors presenting as seizure in alcoholics
 occult traumatic brain injuries
 parenchymal contusions
 subdural haematoma
 Subarachnoid haemorrhages
 Hypoglycemia
 Other substance abuse
Alcoholic hallucinosis- Distinct from DT
 hallucinations that develop within 12 to 24 hrs of abstinence
 resolve within 24 - 48 hrs (earliest point at which delirium
tremens develops)
 usually visual, my be auditory and tactile
 not a/w global clouding of sensorium, only specific
hallucinations
 Vital signs are usually normal
Alcohol withdrawal seizures left untreated progress to
delirium tremens in nearly one-third of patients
Delirium Tremens
 Defined by hallucinations, disorientation, tachycardia, HTN,
hyperthermia, agitation, and diaphoresis after acute reduction or
abstinence from alcohol.
 Begins between 48 -96 hrs after last drink,
 Lasts 1-5 days
 Mortality from DT < 5%, may be due to
 arrhythmia,
 complicating illnesses- pneumonia,
 or failure to identify problem that led to alcohol cessation:
 pancreatitis, hepatitis, or CNS injury or infection.
Risk factors for development of DT
 sustained drinking
 h/o previous DT
 Age > 30
 concurrent illness
 significant alcohol withdrawal in the presence of an elevated alcohol level
 A longer period since the last drink
 patients presenting with alcohol withdrawal >2 days after last drink
have DT more likely than those who present within 2 days)
Management
 Quiet room
 Mechanical restraints
 IVF
 Thiamine, multivitamins
 deficiencies of glucose, potassium, magnesium, phosphate corrected as
needed
 Caloric support
 Benzodiazepines- IV preferred, IM avoided d/t variable absorption
 Diazepam , lorazepam, chlordiazepoxide - most frequently used
 Longacting BZD with active metabolites (eg, diazepam or
chlordiazepoxide) preferred
 As they result in a smoother course with less chance of recurrent
withdrawal or seizures.
Use of sedatives
 Benzodiazepines
 First line therapy for ALL alcohol withdrawal syndrome
 Diazepam, 5-10 mg IV, repeat every 5 -10 min, Max 160/d OR
 Lorazepam, 2 to 4 mg IV, repeat every 15 to 20 minutes esp. in cirrhosis or acute
alcoholic hepatitis - due to short action and absence of active metaboite, no oversedation
 Barbiturates
 Synergistic with benzodiazepines; if refractory to high-dose BZD
 130 to 260 mg IV, repeat every 15 to 20 minutes
 Intubation frequently required with concurrent benzodiazepine and barbiturate use
 ALL patients requiring barbiturates – monitor in ICU
 Propofol
 Excellent agent if refractory to BZD and barbiturates
 Intubation almost always
 1 mg/kg IV push as induction agent for intubation and titrate
Refractory DT
 Is not clearly defined.
 May be present if > 50 mg diazepam or 10 mg lorazepam is
required to control withdrawal during 1st hour of treatment,
 or if > 200 mg of diazepam or 40 mg of lorazepam cant control
symptoms during initial 3 to 4 hrs of Rx
 Require
 Additional Phenobarbitone or propofol
 ICU admission
Not to be used in acute setting
 Such drugs include:
 Ethanol
 Antipsychotics (eg, haloperidol)
 Anticonvulsants (eg, carbamazepine)
 Centrally acting alpha2 agonists (eg, clonidine, dexmedetomidine)
 Beta blockers (eg, propranolol)
 Baclofen
 They can reduce freq and intensity of minor withdrawal
symptoms, but more data supports BZD for Sz, DT
PROPHYLAXIS
 Patients with
 a history of seizures,
 delirium tremens,
 prolonged, heavy alcohol consumption,
 minimally symptomatic or asymptomatic but admitted for other
reasons
 Can be prophylactically treated with oral chlordiazepoxide.
If severe symptoms develop, manage in standard fashion.
Wernicke’s encephalopathy
 Thiamine deficiency
 In 1881, Carl Wernicke described an acute encephalopathy characterized by
mental confusion, ophthalmoplegia, gait ataxia
 associated it with autopsy findings - punctate hemorrhages around 3rd and 4th
ventricles and the aqueduct
 Prevalence at autopsy
 0.4 to 2.8 % - general population in the West
 majority are alcoholic
 Upto 12.5% of alcohol abusers have WE
 Susceptibilty- F>M
Conditions associated with WE
● Chronic alcoholism
● Anorexia nervosa or dieting
● Hyperemesis Gravida
 Prolonged intravenous feeding without proper supplementation
● Prolonged fasting or starvation, or unbalanced nutrition, esp.
with refeeding
● GI surgery (especially bariatric surgery)
● Systemic malignancy
● Transplantation
● Hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis
● AIDS
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
 Thiamine is a cofactor for many enzymes in energy metabolism,
 transketolase, alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, pyruvate dehydrogenase
 Thiamine requirements depend on metabolic rate, greatest during periods of
high metabolic demand and high glucose intake.
 Thus the precipitation of WE in susceptible pts by IV glucose before
thiamine supplementation
 Deficiency initiates neuronal injury by inhibiting metabolism in brain regions
with high metabolic requirements
 BBB breakdown, NMDA receptor mediated excitotoxicity and increased
reactive O2 species induce neurotoxicity
 Deficiency in alcoholics results from:
 inadequate dietary intake, reduced GI absorption, decreased hepatic storage
and impaired utilization
Pathology
 Acute WE lesions - vascular congestion, microglial proliferation, petechial
hemorrhages.
 Chronic cases- demyelination, gliosis, and loss of neuropil with relative
preservation of neurons.
 Neuronal loss most prominent in the relatively unmyelinated medial thalamus
 Atrophy of the mamillary bodies - highly specific in chronic WE and Korsakoff
syndrome :- up to 80 percent of cases
 Lesions occur symmetrically surrounding 3rd and 4th ventricle, aqueduct
 Virtually all cases - The mamillary bodies
 Commonly affected - Dorsomedial thalamus, locus ceruleus, periaqueductal
gray, ocular motor nuclei, vestibular nuclei
 Less frequently - colliculi, fornices, septal region, hippocampus, cerebral cortex,
which may show patchy, diffuse neuronal loss and astrocytic proliferation
 selective loss of Purkinje cells at anterior superior cerebellar vermis
Clinical features
 Classic triad: (< 33%)
 Encephalopathy
 Oculomotor dysfunction
 Gait ataxia
Encephalopathy
 Profound disorientation, indifference, inattentiveness
 If these are less severe, higher cognitive testing shows impaired memory
and learning
 Some exhibit agitated delirium d/t concomitant ethanol withdrawal.
 < 5 % present with depressed consciousness,
 Untreated - progress through stupor and coma to death
Oculomotor dysfunction
 Reflect lesions of oculomotor, abducens, and vestibular nuclei.
 Usually occur in combination
 Nystagmus - MC, horizontal gaze evoked to both sides
 Vertical nystagmus may occur- evoked by upward, rather than
downward gaze
 LR palsy is virtually always bilateral.
 Conjugate gaze palsies, isolated vertical gaze palsy, INO, complete
ophthalmoplegia are rare.
 Pupillary abnormalities- sluggish or unequal pupils
 Advanced cases- complete loss of eye movements with miotic,
nonreactive pupils.
 Ptosis is uncommon.
Gait ataxia
 Primarily involves stance and gait
 likely d/t combination of
 Polyneuropathy
 Cerebellar involvement
 and vestibular dysfunction
 When severe, walking is impossible.
 Less affected patients walk with
 widebased gait and
 slow, short spaced steps.
 appreciated only on tandem gait in some
 Cerebellar pathology - restricted to the anterior and superior vermis;
 thus, ataxia of the legs or arms and dysarthria or scanning speech are uncommon
 Vestibular dysfunction - major cause of acute gait ataxia in WE
 also explains dissociation between gait and limb abnormalities
Other signs
 Evidence of protein calorie malnutrition
 Vestibular dysfunction without hearing loss is a common finding
 Peripheral neuropathy is common and typically involves just the lower
extremities
 gradual onset of weakness, paresthesias, and pain affecting the distal lower
extremities
 examination reveals diminished or absent ankle jerks and patchy distal sensory
loss.
 Hypothermia may cause unreactive pupils, rarely encountered in normothermic
patients with WE
 Lesions in the posterior and posterolateral hypothalamus - consistent with
thermoregulatory functions of the hypothalamus.
 While overt beriberi heart disease is rare in WE, other cardiovascular signs and
symptoms are common
 tachycardia, exertional dyspnea, elevated cardiac output, and EKG abnormalities
Diagnosis
 WE is diagnosed in patients with two of the following four Caine criteria
 Dietary deficiency
 Oculomotor abnormalities
 Cerebellar dysfunction
 Either altered mental status or mild memory impairment
 Caine criteria increased the diagnostic sensitivity for WE from 22% using the
classic triad, to 85%
 There are no laboratory studies that are diagnostic of WE.
 Thiamine deficiency - reliably detected by
 erythrocyte thiamine transketolase (ETKA) before and after thiamine
pyrophosphate (TPP).
 A low ETKA, along with a more than 25 percent stimulation, establishes the
diagnosis of thiamine deficiency
 Not necessary for diagnosis and management
Others
 CSF - normal or may show a mild protein elevation
 Pleocytosis or protein >100 mg/dL - alternative diagnoses
 EEG if NCSE suspected.
 In WE, only ½ pts demonstrate EEG abnormalities,
 usually diffuse mild to moderate slow wave activity
Imaging
 Not essential to diagnosis, shoud not delay Rx
 MRI is more sensitive than CT
 Typical findings include
 areas of increased T2 and FLAIR signals
 decreased T1 signal
 diffusion abnormality
surrounding the aqueduct and third ventricle
within medial thalamus, dorsal medulla, tectal plate, and
mamillary bodies
 Atypical areas - cerebellum, CN nuclei, dentate nuclei, caudate, red
nuclei, splenium and cerebral cortex
Treatment
 Immediate IV thiamine 500 mg over 30 minutes, TID for 2 days
 Then 250 mg IV or IM OD for an additional five days
 other B vitamins and magnsium
 Glucose without thiamine precipitates or worsen WE;. thus, thiamine
administered before glucose.
 GI absorption of thiamine is erratic in alcoholic and malnourished
patients, thus oral administration - unreliable initially
 Daily oral Thiamine 100 mg be continued
Treatment Outcomes
 Prompt thiamine - improvement in ocular signs within hours to days
 If ocular palsies fail to respond, other diagnoses should be considered.
 recovery of vestibular function may begin during 2nd week after thiamine
 gait ataxia coincides with recovery of vestibular function
 Confusion subsides over days and weeks.
 MRI abnormality resolves with clinical improvement
 This early therapeutic response likely represents the recovery from a
biochemical rather than a structural lesion.
Korsakoff syndrome
 Due to Thiamine deficiency in alcoholics, pts as a rule unaware of their illness
 Epidemiology- not well known
 undiagnosed Wernicke syndrome can progress to Korsakoff syndrome.
 Is distinguished from acute WE by
 prominent anterograde and retrograde amnesia
 without substantially impaired alertness and attention
 Without extraocular movement disturbance.
 Manifestations include
 anterograde amnesia, impaired ability to acquire or retain new information;
 prominent confabulation is due to inability to recall even a brief, simple story or recent
information.
 Retrograde amnesia is identified by the inability to recall elements of both recent and
remote memory
 significant degree of vacuous spontaneous speech and abulia - mistaken for
depressive symptoms
 Attention and social behavior are relatively preserved
May result when both the thalamus (particularly the anterior thalamic nucleus)
and hypothalamus (medial mammillary nucleus) are injured
 Patients with KS rarely recover.
 With thiamine, confabulation nmay resolv, amnesia persists
 Many patients require at least some form of supervision and social support,
Alcoholic polyneuropathy:
Nutritional , direct toxic effect of alcohol
 Peripheral distal sensorimotor neuropathy
 Chronic, well-fed alcoholics without vitamin deficiency
 develop slowly progressive sensory loss affecting small fiber- mediated
functions, especially nociception
 pain and burning paresthesia are common
 no ataxia or weakness from neuropathy
 Non-alcoholic thiamine deficiency produces prominent subacute weakness
and sensory ataxia from large-diameter > small-diameter fiber sensory
neuropathy
 Malnourished chronic alcoholics have features of both
 Patients may disregard minor paresthesia or anesthetic areas until significant
pain or gait difficulties evolve
 Ataxia difficult to differentiate from Alcoholic Cerebellar degeneration
 Autonomic symptoms, including orthostatic hypotension, impotence,
incontinence, hyper- or hypohidrosis :- May be present
 difficult to demonstrate at the bedside unless frank orthostatic hypotension is
present
 Electrodiagnostic testing shows typical evidence of an axonal sensorimotor
neuropathy.
 Sensory distal amplitudes are reduced, or potentials are unrecordable.
 Motor evoked amplitude may be reduced, but to a lesser degree.
 Patients may have behaviors, such as prolonged immobility or adverse body
positions :- increased risk of compression neuropathy
 Biopsy (Sural nerve) shows typical changes, but not indicated
 Adequate nutrition, multivitamin supplements and thiamine
 Ususally good recovery but some residual deficits persist
ALCOHOLIC CEREBELLAR DEGENERATION
 Chronic cerebellar syndrome related to degeneration of Purkinje cells in
the cerebellar cortex : Midline cerebellar structures-
 anterior and superior vermis predominantly affected, identical to WE
 Develops only after 10 or more years of excessive ethanol
 may be d/t combination of nutritional deficiency and alcohol neurotoxicity
 Majority complain of gait impairment- weakness, unsteadiness, or
incoordination in the legs
 Later, a minority incoordination and tremor in the arms, dysarthria, and
intermittent diplopia or blurred vision.
 Examination demonstrates features of midline cerebellar lesion
 ataxia of stance and gait, resembling that of acute alcohol intoxication
 Tandem walking is typically impossible, even with mild disease.
 Heel-knee-shin is abnormal, but finger-nose may show mild
abnormalities,
 more severe impairment of handwriting
 Mild dysarthria- slow, slurred speech
 Some have a coarse, rhythmic, 3 to 5 Hz postural tremor affecting the
fingers, arms, or thighs.
 Cognitive function usually unimpaired, except if prior WE.
 Absence of CN abnormalities differentiates from vascular
disorders of posterior circulation, mass lesions, and demyelinative disease.
 age of onset and clinical course differentiates from some of the SCA;
 MSA, including olivopontocerebellar degeneration, may be difficult to distinguish on
clinical grounds alone
 Diagnosis - clinical history and neurologic examination
 CT or MRI scans may show cerebellar cortical atrophy,
 but one half of alcoholic patients with this finding are not ataxic on examination
 PET - shows reduction in cerebral metabolic rate for glucose and decrease in BZD
receptor binding in the superior cerebellar vermis :
 magnitude of hypometabolism correlates with the clinical severity
 Treatment: Cessation and supplementation, but ataxia persists in most
Ventricular Enlargement and Cognitive Dysfunction
 50 to 70 % alcohol abusers have cognitive deficits on neuropsychological
testing
 Ethanol neurotoxicity may contribute to this
 CT / MRI show enlargement of the cerebral ventricles and sulci in majority
of alcohol abusers.
 But do not correlate consistently with duration of drinking or severity of
cognitive impairment
 hypothesized that changes in brain parenchyma, but not brain water, accounts
for reversible radiographic and cognitive abnormalities of alcoholics
 Regional vulnerability:-
 Superior frontal cortex corrobrated by regional hypometabolism on PET
studies
 correlates with deficits in working memory in alcohol abusers
 White matter regional pathology is reveersible with abstinence
 Cetral pontine myelinolysis
 As they have poor energy reserves, Na-K-ATPase pump which
regulates osmolyte transport across neuronal membrane fails,
demyelination ensues
 Marchiafava Bignami disease
 rare disorder of demyelination or necrosis of corpus callosum and
adjacent subcortical white matter
 predominantly in malnourished alcoholics
 acute, subacute, or chronic
 marked by dementia, spasticity, dysarthria, inability to walk
 Patients may lapse into coma and die
Alcohol amblyopia
 far less common
 presents as a painless bilateral loss of vision in alcohol abusers
 Almost all c/o blurring or dimness of vision and of difficulty in reading small
prints.
 disease usually evolves over several weeks to months
 Fundus- may be normal or
 mild to moderate pallor of optic nerve heads; most apparent in temporal half
 stigmata of undernutrition is encountered
 Improvement almost always with adequate dietary and vitamin intake.
Acute and chronic alcoholic myopathy
 In two different studies, > 50 to 60 % alcoholi abuusrs had biopsy evidence of myopathy
 Skeletal muscle can be damaged by the administration of alcohol to wellnourished
volunteers ? Direct toxicity
 Electrolyte abnormalities - ?? hypokalemia, also impair skeletal muscle function
Acute myopathy
 develops over hours to days, often in relation to an alcoholic binge
 characterized by weakness, pain, tenderness, and swelling of affected muscles.
 ?? fasting during a binge may precipitate muscle injury
 majority are men
 Proximal most severely involved, but can be asymmetric or focal.
 Dysphagia and CCF may occur
 Laboratory findings- moderate to severe elevation of CK, myoglobinuria,
 EMG- fibrillations and myopathic changes
 Biopsy - muscle fiber necrosis on biopsy
 Treatment is directed at correcting cardiac arrhythmias, renal failure due to
rhabdomyolysis, and electrolyte distr.
 Abstinence - gradual, often partial, recovery
Chronic alcoholic myopathy
 evolves over weeks to months, is more common
 Pain < than in acute alcoholic myopathy, but muscle cramps may occur.
 Examination major findings are muscle weakness and atrophy, which affect
predominantly hip and shoulder girdles
 polyneuropathy coexists in many
 But clinical and laboratory features indicate a primary disturbance of muscle.
 Serum CK < in acute alcoholic myopathy, and myoglobinuria does not occur.
 Cessation improvement,
 continued alcohol abuse clinical deterioration
Hepatic encephalopathy
 Clinical triad
 West Haven stages of hepatic encephalopathy & Rx
Stroke
 Light to moderate use (up to two drinks a day for men and one for
women)
 elevates HDL concentration and reduced risk
 heavy alcohol consumption - increased risk for total stroke.
 cardiogenic brain embolism.
 Increased risk for hemorrhagic stroke
 alcohol-induced hypertension predisposes to spontaneous ICH
 active drinkers - higher freq. OSA with more severe hypoxemia.
 recommended to cease or reduce consumption for heavy drinkers.
Headache- Immediate or delayed
 May trigger cluster headache
 Immediate alcohol related headache:- Defined by HIS
 Occuring within 3 hrs of ingestion, resolving within 72 hrs of cessation of
alcohol
 Atleast one of the following:
 Bilateral
 Fronto-temporal
 Pulsatile
 Aggravtion by physical activity
 Amount independent of previous h/o migraine
 Delayed headache:
 Same character, but occurs when blood alcohol level drops or reduces to zero
Brain tumor
 Because beer and liquor contain nitrosamines,
 ?? Alcohol may increase the risk
 However, no consistent association between different types of alcohol and risk
of gliomas or meningiomas in
 childhood (maternal consumption)
 or adulthood.
References
 Daroff RB, Jankovic J, Mazziotta JC, Pomeroy SL. Bradley's neurology in
clinical practice. Elsevier Health Sciences; 2015 Oct 25.
 McIntosh C, Chick J. Alcohol and the nervous system. Journal of Neurology,
Neurosurgery & Psychiatry. 2004 Sep 1;75(suppl 3):iii16-21.
 Noble JM, Weimer LH. Neurologic complications of alcoholism.
CONTINUUM: Lifelong Learning in Neurology. 2014 Jun 1;20(3, Neurology of
Systemic Disease):624-41.
 Uptodate website 2017
Thank you

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Ppt on alcohol in neurology

  • 2.  Acute alcoholic intoxication  Alcohol withdrawal  Withdrawal seizures  Alcohol hallucinosis  Delirium tremens  Nutritional deficiencies:  Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome.  Alcoholic polyneuropathy.  Pellagra.  Neurological complication of uncertain etiology:  Alcoholic cerebellar degeneration  Central pontine myelinolysis  Marchiafava-Bignami disease  Alcoholic amblyopia
  • 3.  Encephalopathy:  Hepatic encephalopathy  Trauma:  SDH  Post stroke epilepsy  Others:  Stroke  brain tumors  Headache  Hypoglycemia
  • 4.  Alcohol  facilitates inhibitory neurotransmitter GABA  and inhibits excitation induced by NMDA  It has effects on opioid, dopamine, and serotonin systems  Sustained heavy consumption casues dependency and increased tolerance with  reduced sensitivity to GABA  increased sensitivity to NMDA
  • 5.
  • 6.
  • 7.  Blood alcohol concentrations reflect rate of intake, degree of tolerance.  Extreme intoxication (>300 mg/100 ml)  increasing drowsiness and then coma  depressed tendon reflexes  hypotension, hypothermia, and slowed respiration  Alcohol concentrations >400 mg/100 ml.  Death may occur  At < 400 mg/100 ml, look for alternative cause for coma  head injury, other drug usage  hypoglycemia, meningitis
  • 8.  At a cellular level daily alcohol intake induces  functional increase in NMDA receptor levels- excitatory  When alcohol is stopped  these excess receptors cause large calcium flux into cells, hyperexcitability, and cell death.  alcohol mediated inhibitory action of GABA reduces  Increase in excitatory glutamate and drop inhibitory GABA give noradrenergic ‘‘overdrive’’- sympathetic overactivity.
  • 9.
  • 10.
  • 11. Alcohol-withdrawal syndrome  with a long history of sustained alcohol use  Symptoms after 4 -12 hrs after last consumption, may start upto 48 to 72 hrs esp. delirium  Initial symptoms –  insomnia, anxiety, tremulousness, palpitations, diaphoresis  Can appear even when significant alcohol level in blood is present.  Minor symptoms - self-limited, symptoms peaking and resolving within 72 hours.  Moderate to severe - urgent medical attention as they are complicated by  withdrawal seizures  alcoholic hallucinosis,  delirium tremens- DT
  • 12. Alcohol-withdrawal seizures  Usually GTCS, occuring between 12 -48 hours from the last drink  either a single seizure or brief flurry, usually self limiting  Age group- Chronic alcoholics, 4th or 5th decade  Status epilepticus –rare, but rates upto 9 - 25% observed  Outcome more favourable, but recovery may be compounded by prolonged post-ictal state.  Investigation for structural, metabolic, infectious causes if:  status epilepticus  focal seizures  or focal deficits in the postictal state  recurrent or prolonged seizures require Rx.
  • 13. Withdrawal seizures  Diagnosis  presence of other symptoms of alcohol withdrawal  h/o recent alcohol misuse.  ?? genetic susceptibility +  Other factors presenting as seizure in alcoholics  occult traumatic brain injuries  parenchymal contusions  subdural haematoma  Subarachnoid haemorrhages  Hypoglycemia  Other substance abuse
  • 14. Alcoholic hallucinosis- Distinct from DT  hallucinations that develop within 12 to 24 hrs of abstinence  resolve within 24 - 48 hrs (earliest point at which delirium tremens develops)  usually visual, my be auditory and tactile  not a/w global clouding of sensorium, only specific hallucinations  Vital signs are usually normal
  • 15. Alcohol withdrawal seizures left untreated progress to delirium tremens in nearly one-third of patients
  • 16. Delirium Tremens  Defined by hallucinations, disorientation, tachycardia, HTN, hyperthermia, agitation, and diaphoresis after acute reduction or abstinence from alcohol.  Begins between 48 -96 hrs after last drink,  Lasts 1-5 days  Mortality from DT < 5%, may be due to  arrhythmia,  complicating illnesses- pneumonia,  or failure to identify problem that led to alcohol cessation:  pancreatitis, hepatitis, or CNS injury or infection.
  • 17. Risk factors for development of DT  sustained drinking  h/o previous DT  Age > 30  concurrent illness  significant alcohol withdrawal in the presence of an elevated alcohol level  A longer period since the last drink  patients presenting with alcohol withdrawal >2 days after last drink have DT more likely than those who present within 2 days)
  • 18. Management  Quiet room  Mechanical restraints  IVF  Thiamine, multivitamins  deficiencies of glucose, potassium, magnesium, phosphate corrected as needed  Caloric support  Benzodiazepines- IV preferred, IM avoided d/t variable absorption  Diazepam , lorazepam, chlordiazepoxide - most frequently used  Longacting BZD with active metabolites (eg, diazepam or chlordiazepoxide) preferred  As they result in a smoother course with less chance of recurrent withdrawal or seizures.
  • 19. Use of sedatives  Benzodiazepines  First line therapy for ALL alcohol withdrawal syndrome  Diazepam, 5-10 mg IV, repeat every 5 -10 min, Max 160/d OR  Lorazepam, 2 to 4 mg IV, repeat every 15 to 20 minutes esp. in cirrhosis or acute alcoholic hepatitis - due to short action and absence of active metaboite, no oversedation  Barbiturates  Synergistic with benzodiazepines; if refractory to high-dose BZD  130 to 260 mg IV, repeat every 15 to 20 minutes  Intubation frequently required with concurrent benzodiazepine and barbiturate use  ALL patients requiring barbiturates – monitor in ICU  Propofol  Excellent agent if refractory to BZD and barbiturates  Intubation almost always  1 mg/kg IV push as induction agent for intubation and titrate
  • 20. Refractory DT  Is not clearly defined.  May be present if > 50 mg diazepam or 10 mg lorazepam is required to control withdrawal during 1st hour of treatment,  or if > 200 mg of diazepam or 40 mg of lorazepam cant control symptoms during initial 3 to 4 hrs of Rx  Require  Additional Phenobarbitone or propofol  ICU admission
  • 21.
  • 22. Not to be used in acute setting  Such drugs include:  Ethanol  Antipsychotics (eg, haloperidol)  Anticonvulsants (eg, carbamazepine)  Centrally acting alpha2 agonists (eg, clonidine, dexmedetomidine)  Beta blockers (eg, propranolol)  Baclofen  They can reduce freq and intensity of minor withdrawal symptoms, but more data supports BZD for Sz, DT
  • 23. PROPHYLAXIS  Patients with  a history of seizures,  delirium tremens,  prolonged, heavy alcohol consumption,  minimally symptomatic or asymptomatic but admitted for other reasons  Can be prophylactically treated with oral chlordiazepoxide. If severe symptoms develop, manage in standard fashion.
  • 24. Wernicke’s encephalopathy  Thiamine deficiency  In 1881, Carl Wernicke described an acute encephalopathy characterized by mental confusion, ophthalmoplegia, gait ataxia  associated it with autopsy findings - punctate hemorrhages around 3rd and 4th ventricles and the aqueduct  Prevalence at autopsy  0.4 to 2.8 % - general population in the West  majority are alcoholic  Upto 12.5% of alcohol abusers have WE  Susceptibilty- F>M
  • 25. Conditions associated with WE ● Chronic alcoholism ● Anorexia nervosa or dieting ● Hyperemesis Gravida  Prolonged intravenous feeding without proper supplementation ● Prolonged fasting or starvation, or unbalanced nutrition, esp. with refeeding ● GI surgery (especially bariatric surgery) ● Systemic malignancy ● Transplantation ● Hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis ● AIDS
  • 26. PATHOPHYSIOLOGY  Thiamine is a cofactor for many enzymes in energy metabolism,  transketolase, alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, pyruvate dehydrogenase  Thiamine requirements depend on metabolic rate, greatest during periods of high metabolic demand and high glucose intake.  Thus the precipitation of WE in susceptible pts by IV glucose before thiamine supplementation  Deficiency initiates neuronal injury by inhibiting metabolism in brain regions with high metabolic requirements  BBB breakdown, NMDA receptor mediated excitotoxicity and increased reactive O2 species induce neurotoxicity  Deficiency in alcoholics results from:  inadequate dietary intake, reduced GI absorption, decreased hepatic storage and impaired utilization
  • 27. Pathology  Acute WE lesions - vascular congestion, microglial proliferation, petechial hemorrhages.  Chronic cases- demyelination, gliosis, and loss of neuropil with relative preservation of neurons.  Neuronal loss most prominent in the relatively unmyelinated medial thalamus  Atrophy of the mamillary bodies - highly specific in chronic WE and Korsakoff syndrome :- up to 80 percent of cases  Lesions occur symmetrically surrounding 3rd and 4th ventricle, aqueduct  Virtually all cases - The mamillary bodies  Commonly affected - Dorsomedial thalamus, locus ceruleus, periaqueductal gray, ocular motor nuclei, vestibular nuclei  Less frequently - colliculi, fornices, septal region, hippocampus, cerebral cortex, which may show patchy, diffuse neuronal loss and astrocytic proliferation  selective loss of Purkinje cells at anterior superior cerebellar vermis
  • 28.
  • 29. Clinical features  Classic triad: (< 33%)  Encephalopathy  Oculomotor dysfunction  Gait ataxia
  • 30. Encephalopathy  Profound disorientation, indifference, inattentiveness  If these are less severe, higher cognitive testing shows impaired memory and learning  Some exhibit agitated delirium d/t concomitant ethanol withdrawal.  < 5 % present with depressed consciousness,  Untreated - progress through stupor and coma to death
  • 31. Oculomotor dysfunction  Reflect lesions of oculomotor, abducens, and vestibular nuclei.  Usually occur in combination  Nystagmus - MC, horizontal gaze evoked to both sides  Vertical nystagmus may occur- evoked by upward, rather than downward gaze  LR palsy is virtually always bilateral.  Conjugate gaze palsies, isolated vertical gaze palsy, INO, complete ophthalmoplegia are rare.  Pupillary abnormalities- sluggish or unequal pupils  Advanced cases- complete loss of eye movements with miotic, nonreactive pupils.  Ptosis is uncommon.
  • 32. Gait ataxia  Primarily involves stance and gait  likely d/t combination of  Polyneuropathy  Cerebellar involvement  and vestibular dysfunction  When severe, walking is impossible.  Less affected patients walk with  widebased gait and  slow, short spaced steps.  appreciated only on tandem gait in some  Cerebellar pathology - restricted to the anterior and superior vermis;  thus, ataxia of the legs or arms and dysarthria or scanning speech are uncommon  Vestibular dysfunction - major cause of acute gait ataxia in WE  also explains dissociation between gait and limb abnormalities
  • 33. Other signs  Evidence of protein calorie malnutrition  Vestibular dysfunction without hearing loss is a common finding  Peripheral neuropathy is common and typically involves just the lower extremities  gradual onset of weakness, paresthesias, and pain affecting the distal lower extremities  examination reveals diminished or absent ankle jerks and patchy distal sensory loss.  Hypothermia may cause unreactive pupils, rarely encountered in normothermic patients with WE  Lesions in the posterior and posterolateral hypothalamus - consistent with thermoregulatory functions of the hypothalamus.  While overt beriberi heart disease is rare in WE, other cardiovascular signs and symptoms are common  tachycardia, exertional dyspnea, elevated cardiac output, and EKG abnormalities
  • 34. Diagnosis  WE is diagnosed in patients with two of the following four Caine criteria  Dietary deficiency  Oculomotor abnormalities  Cerebellar dysfunction  Either altered mental status or mild memory impairment  Caine criteria increased the diagnostic sensitivity for WE from 22% using the classic triad, to 85%  There are no laboratory studies that are diagnostic of WE.  Thiamine deficiency - reliably detected by  erythrocyte thiamine transketolase (ETKA) before and after thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP).  A low ETKA, along with a more than 25 percent stimulation, establishes the diagnosis of thiamine deficiency  Not necessary for diagnosis and management
  • 35. Others  CSF - normal or may show a mild protein elevation  Pleocytosis or protein >100 mg/dL - alternative diagnoses  EEG if NCSE suspected.  In WE, only ½ pts demonstrate EEG abnormalities,  usually diffuse mild to moderate slow wave activity
  • 36. Imaging  Not essential to diagnosis, shoud not delay Rx  MRI is more sensitive than CT  Typical findings include  areas of increased T2 and FLAIR signals  decreased T1 signal  diffusion abnormality surrounding the aqueduct and third ventricle within medial thalamus, dorsal medulla, tectal plate, and mamillary bodies  Atypical areas - cerebellum, CN nuclei, dentate nuclei, caudate, red nuclei, splenium and cerebral cortex
  • 37.
  • 38.
  • 39.
  • 40.
  • 41. Treatment  Immediate IV thiamine 500 mg over 30 minutes, TID for 2 days  Then 250 mg IV or IM OD for an additional five days  other B vitamins and magnsium  Glucose without thiamine precipitates or worsen WE;. thus, thiamine administered before glucose.  GI absorption of thiamine is erratic in alcoholic and malnourished patients, thus oral administration - unreliable initially  Daily oral Thiamine 100 mg be continued
  • 42. Treatment Outcomes  Prompt thiamine - improvement in ocular signs within hours to days  If ocular palsies fail to respond, other diagnoses should be considered.  recovery of vestibular function may begin during 2nd week after thiamine  gait ataxia coincides with recovery of vestibular function  Confusion subsides over days and weeks.  MRI abnormality resolves with clinical improvement  This early therapeutic response likely represents the recovery from a biochemical rather than a structural lesion.
  • 43. Korsakoff syndrome  Due to Thiamine deficiency in alcoholics, pts as a rule unaware of their illness  Epidemiology- not well known  undiagnosed Wernicke syndrome can progress to Korsakoff syndrome.  Is distinguished from acute WE by  prominent anterograde and retrograde amnesia  without substantially impaired alertness and attention  Without extraocular movement disturbance.  Manifestations include  anterograde amnesia, impaired ability to acquire or retain new information;  prominent confabulation is due to inability to recall even a brief, simple story or recent information.  Retrograde amnesia is identified by the inability to recall elements of both recent and remote memory
  • 44.  significant degree of vacuous spontaneous speech and abulia - mistaken for depressive symptoms  Attention and social behavior are relatively preserved May result when both the thalamus (particularly the anterior thalamic nucleus) and hypothalamus (medial mammillary nucleus) are injured  Patients with KS rarely recover.  With thiamine, confabulation nmay resolv, amnesia persists  Many patients require at least some form of supervision and social support,
  • 45. Alcoholic polyneuropathy: Nutritional , direct toxic effect of alcohol  Peripheral distal sensorimotor neuropathy  Chronic, well-fed alcoholics without vitamin deficiency  develop slowly progressive sensory loss affecting small fiber- mediated functions, especially nociception  pain and burning paresthesia are common  no ataxia or weakness from neuropathy  Non-alcoholic thiamine deficiency produces prominent subacute weakness and sensory ataxia from large-diameter > small-diameter fiber sensory neuropathy  Malnourished chronic alcoholics have features of both  Patients may disregard minor paresthesia or anesthetic areas until significant pain or gait difficulties evolve  Ataxia difficult to differentiate from Alcoholic Cerebellar degeneration
  • 46.  Autonomic symptoms, including orthostatic hypotension, impotence, incontinence, hyper- or hypohidrosis :- May be present  difficult to demonstrate at the bedside unless frank orthostatic hypotension is present  Electrodiagnostic testing shows typical evidence of an axonal sensorimotor neuropathy.  Sensory distal amplitudes are reduced, or potentials are unrecordable.  Motor evoked amplitude may be reduced, but to a lesser degree.  Patients may have behaviors, such as prolonged immobility or adverse body positions :- increased risk of compression neuropathy  Biopsy (Sural nerve) shows typical changes, but not indicated  Adequate nutrition, multivitamin supplements and thiamine  Ususally good recovery but some residual deficits persist
  • 47. ALCOHOLIC CEREBELLAR DEGENERATION  Chronic cerebellar syndrome related to degeneration of Purkinje cells in the cerebellar cortex : Midline cerebellar structures-  anterior and superior vermis predominantly affected, identical to WE  Develops only after 10 or more years of excessive ethanol  may be d/t combination of nutritional deficiency and alcohol neurotoxicity  Majority complain of gait impairment- weakness, unsteadiness, or incoordination in the legs  Later, a minority incoordination and tremor in the arms, dysarthria, and intermittent diplopia or blurred vision.
  • 48.  Examination demonstrates features of midline cerebellar lesion  ataxia of stance and gait, resembling that of acute alcohol intoxication  Tandem walking is typically impossible, even with mild disease.  Heel-knee-shin is abnormal, but finger-nose may show mild abnormalities,  more severe impairment of handwriting  Mild dysarthria- slow, slurred speech  Some have a coarse, rhythmic, 3 to 5 Hz postural tremor affecting the fingers, arms, or thighs.  Cognitive function usually unimpaired, except if prior WE.
  • 49.  Absence of CN abnormalities differentiates from vascular disorders of posterior circulation, mass lesions, and demyelinative disease.  age of onset and clinical course differentiates from some of the SCA;  MSA, including olivopontocerebellar degeneration, may be difficult to distinguish on clinical grounds alone  Diagnosis - clinical history and neurologic examination  CT or MRI scans may show cerebellar cortical atrophy,  but one half of alcoholic patients with this finding are not ataxic on examination  PET - shows reduction in cerebral metabolic rate for glucose and decrease in BZD receptor binding in the superior cerebellar vermis :  magnitude of hypometabolism correlates with the clinical severity  Treatment: Cessation and supplementation, but ataxia persists in most
  • 50.
  • 51.
  • 52. Ventricular Enlargement and Cognitive Dysfunction  50 to 70 % alcohol abusers have cognitive deficits on neuropsychological testing  Ethanol neurotoxicity may contribute to this  CT / MRI show enlargement of the cerebral ventricles and sulci in majority of alcohol abusers.  But do not correlate consistently with duration of drinking or severity of cognitive impairment  hypothesized that changes in brain parenchyma, but not brain water, accounts for reversible radiographic and cognitive abnormalities of alcoholics  Regional vulnerability:-  Superior frontal cortex corrobrated by regional hypometabolism on PET studies  correlates with deficits in working memory in alcohol abusers  White matter regional pathology is reveersible with abstinence
  • 53.
  • 54.  Cetral pontine myelinolysis  As they have poor energy reserves, Na-K-ATPase pump which regulates osmolyte transport across neuronal membrane fails, demyelination ensues  Marchiafava Bignami disease  rare disorder of demyelination or necrosis of corpus callosum and adjacent subcortical white matter  predominantly in malnourished alcoholics  acute, subacute, or chronic  marked by dementia, spasticity, dysarthria, inability to walk  Patients may lapse into coma and die
  • 55.
  • 56.
  • 57. Alcohol amblyopia  far less common  presents as a painless bilateral loss of vision in alcohol abusers  Almost all c/o blurring or dimness of vision and of difficulty in reading small prints.  disease usually evolves over several weeks to months  Fundus- may be normal or  mild to moderate pallor of optic nerve heads; most apparent in temporal half  stigmata of undernutrition is encountered  Improvement almost always with adequate dietary and vitamin intake.
  • 58.
  • 59. Acute and chronic alcoholic myopathy  In two different studies, > 50 to 60 % alcoholi abuusrs had biopsy evidence of myopathy  Skeletal muscle can be damaged by the administration of alcohol to wellnourished volunteers ? Direct toxicity  Electrolyte abnormalities - ?? hypokalemia, also impair skeletal muscle function
  • 60. Acute myopathy  develops over hours to days, often in relation to an alcoholic binge  characterized by weakness, pain, tenderness, and swelling of affected muscles.  ?? fasting during a binge may precipitate muscle injury  majority are men  Proximal most severely involved, but can be asymmetric or focal.  Dysphagia and CCF may occur  Laboratory findings- moderate to severe elevation of CK, myoglobinuria,  EMG- fibrillations and myopathic changes  Biopsy - muscle fiber necrosis on biopsy  Treatment is directed at correcting cardiac arrhythmias, renal failure due to rhabdomyolysis, and electrolyte distr.  Abstinence - gradual, often partial, recovery
  • 61.
  • 62. Chronic alcoholic myopathy  evolves over weeks to months, is more common  Pain < than in acute alcoholic myopathy, but muscle cramps may occur.  Examination major findings are muscle weakness and atrophy, which affect predominantly hip and shoulder girdles  polyneuropathy coexists in many  But clinical and laboratory features indicate a primary disturbance of muscle.  Serum CK < in acute alcoholic myopathy, and myoglobinuria does not occur.  Cessation improvement,  continued alcohol abuse clinical deterioration
  • 63. Hepatic encephalopathy  Clinical triad  West Haven stages of hepatic encephalopathy & Rx
  • 64.
  • 65. Stroke  Light to moderate use (up to two drinks a day for men and one for women)  elevates HDL concentration and reduced risk  heavy alcohol consumption - increased risk for total stroke.  cardiogenic brain embolism.  Increased risk for hemorrhagic stroke  alcohol-induced hypertension predisposes to spontaneous ICH  active drinkers - higher freq. OSA with more severe hypoxemia.  recommended to cease or reduce consumption for heavy drinkers.
  • 66. Headache- Immediate or delayed  May trigger cluster headache  Immediate alcohol related headache:- Defined by HIS  Occuring within 3 hrs of ingestion, resolving within 72 hrs of cessation of alcohol  Atleast one of the following:  Bilateral  Fronto-temporal  Pulsatile  Aggravtion by physical activity  Amount independent of previous h/o migraine  Delayed headache:  Same character, but occurs when blood alcohol level drops or reduces to zero
  • 67. Brain tumor  Because beer and liquor contain nitrosamines,  ?? Alcohol may increase the risk  However, no consistent association between different types of alcohol and risk of gliomas or meningiomas in  childhood (maternal consumption)  or adulthood.
  • 68. References  Daroff RB, Jankovic J, Mazziotta JC, Pomeroy SL. Bradley's neurology in clinical practice. Elsevier Health Sciences; 2015 Oct 25.  McIntosh C, Chick J. Alcohol and the nervous system. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry. 2004 Sep 1;75(suppl 3):iii16-21.  Noble JM, Weimer LH. Neurologic complications of alcoholism. CONTINUUM: Lifelong Learning in Neurology. 2014 Jun 1;20(3, Neurology of Systemic Disease):624-41.  Uptodate website 2017