A retrospective study compared the course of alcohol withdrawal, including delirium tremens, in women and men hospitalized in the Nowowiejski Hospital in Warsaw from 1973 to 1987. Medical records pertaining to 1179 patients were analyzed; 13.8% of these patients were women and 86.2% were men. The study showed that women began intensive alcohol drinking later than men (p < 0.0001), but the period between the onset of alcohol abuse and the first occurrence of alcohol withdrawal was shorter in women than in men (p < 0.0001). In the period of heavy drinking before hospitalization, women consumed significantly less alcohol then men (p < 0.0001); moreover, women drank nonbeverage alcohol less frequently than men (p < 0.05). Women were hospitalized substantially longer than men (p < 0.0001), whereas the duration of alcohol withdrawal symptoms at the time of hospitalization was comparable in both groups. Withdrawal seizures were significantly more frequent among men than among women (p < 0.001). Significant differences in the patients' somatic conditions were not noted between the groups, with the exception of anemia and decreased potassium concentration, which were more frequently observed in women (both p < 0.0001), and of increased concentration of ALT and hypoproteinemia, which were more frequent in men (respectively, p < 0.05 and p < 0.01). Co-existing personality disorders, depressive disorders, and anxiety disorders--as well as abuse of benzodiazepines and barbiturates--were more frequently observed in women (p < 0.0001). The period between the first hospitalization due to alcohol withdrawal and the time of death was significantly shorter in men than in women (p < 0.05). The results point to differences in the conditions and the course of alcohol dependence and alcohol withdrawal between women and men.
The efficacy of the diazepam loading dose method of treatment of delirium tremens was assessed in comparison with the traditional therapy. The experimental group and the control group comprised 51 and 45 patients respectively. The clinical institute withdrawal assessment for alcohol (CIWA-A) scale was applied to assess the intensity of the symptoms. Diazepam doses in the experimental group oscillated from 40 to 210 mg (mean 86.9 +/- 47.2 mg). The control group was receiving diazepam and other psychotropic drugs in divided doses. In the experimental group deliric symptoms were present from 2 to 24 h (mean 6.9 +/- 4.8 h), and in the control group from 2 to 123 h (mean 33.8 +/- 25.7 h). The results show a large efficacy of the loading dose method corresponding to substantial reduction of the psychosis duration (fivefold in comparison to the control group). The method proved to be safe, with no significant complications.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the hypothetical role of kindling phenomenon in the development and course of alcohol withdrawal (AW) seizures and delirium tremens (DT). The 2186 medical records of 1179 patients hospitalized in Nowowiejski Hospital in Warsaw from 1973 to 1987 were reviewed using a structured questionnaire. Investigating the role of kindling, a course of consecutive AW episodes of patients hospitalized several times was analyzed. The relationships of withdrawal seizures with the duration of alcohol abuse, the number of prior detoxification episodes, and other variables were also studied. Increasing severity of AW symptoms was observed during the course of consecutive episodes in 22.5% of patients. The first episode of DT was preceded by withdrawal seizures in 11% of cases. First-ever withdrawal seizures occurred more frequently in patients with head injury in the past and with coexisting symptoms of alcohol liver disease. Occurrence of withdrawal seizures and DTs did not correlate with the number of previous withdrawal episodes or with the length of period of intensive drinking. We concluded that the kindling model could be applied only to some cases in the development of AW seizures and DTs. Kindling should be considered as one of the multiple mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of AW delirium.
The aim of this study was to compare the course of alcohol withdrawal (AW) syndromes in different age groups of hospitalized patients. Medical records of 892 patients treated for AW in Nowowiejski Hospital in Warsaw, Poland from 1973 to 1987 were reviewed using a structured questionnaire; a further 321 patients were observed on a prospective basis in the years 1990-1999. We compared severity of the symptoms and the course of AW episodes in five age groups: <30, 30-39, 40-49, 50-59 and > or =60 years old. Although the age groups did not differ in respect of gender, there were significant differences in other demographic variables, such as marital status, education, employment and number of households. We found a greater prevalence of somatic diseases and hypokalaemia in the older age groups. Older patients were hospitalized longer than the younger patients. The amount of alcohol consumed was significantly smaller in the older patients. No significant differences were found between age groups in the duration and severity of AW symptoms. All age groups required comparable doses of medication. The relationship between the duration of AW and the amount of alcohol consumed during the last drinking bout was significant in patients aged >50 years. There was also a significant positive correlation between the occurrence of withdrawal seizures or the severity of AW symptoms and the number of previous AW episodes in patients aged > or =40 years. Although the results did not confirm some previously reported differences in the course of AW between older and younger patients, they point to some new important differences in the conditions and course of AW in the elderly.
In a retrospective study, we evaluated the role of somatic disease and physical injury in the development and course of alcohol withdrawal delirium. Medical records of 1179 patients treated for alcohol withdrawal in Nowowiejski Hospital in Warsaw from 1973 to 1987 were reviewed using a structured questionnaire. Development, symptoms' severity, and the course of alcohol withdrawal delirium were assessed in possible relation to the somatic state of patients and other variables of alcohol dependence. Development of the first episode of delirium tremens (DT) was associated with the incidence of somatic disease or injury in 19% of cases. Somatic disorders directly preceded the second episode of DT in 73% and the third in 57% of cases. A positive correlation was found between the greater severity and/or longer duration of DT symptoms, and occurrence of pneumonia, coronary heart disease, alcohol liver disease, and anemia, as well as daily amount of alcohol consumed during the last drinking bout. There was no relationship of severity of DT with the duration of alcohol abuse. Early development and severe course of alcohol withdrawal delirium correlated with the late beginning of excessive drinking (over the age of 40) and concomitant abuse of benzodiazepines or barbiturates. We concluded that somatic disorders or physical injury might trigger delirium during alcohol withdrawal, and have essential influence on the symptoms' severity and duration of DT. A more severe course of DT is also correlated with the quantity of alcohol consumed and concomitant abuse of sedatives.
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