2023
DOI: 10.1016/j.jss.2022.11.029
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Phenobarbital for the Management of Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome in Critically Ill, Surgical-Trauma Patients

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…20 Another study of 60 patients receiving at least one dose of phenobarbital, initiated per provider discretion without protocol, suggested the time to initiation of phenobarbital was longer in patients with AWS-related complications. 21 Both trials lacked comparators, and support the use of a protocolized approach to phenobarbital use for AWS in the trauma population, such as in our study. A study of 85 surgical-trauma patients found that phenobarbital-treated patients were less likely to develop alcohol withdrawal delirium, uncomplicated AWS, or experience medication AEs compared to patients treated with a fixed-dose benzodiazepine-based protocol.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 70%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…20 Another study of 60 patients receiving at least one dose of phenobarbital, initiated per provider discretion without protocol, suggested the time to initiation of phenobarbital was longer in patients with AWS-related complications. 21 Both trials lacked comparators, and support the use of a protocolized approach to phenobarbital use for AWS in the trauma population, such as in our study. A study of 85 surgical-trauma patients found that phenobarbital-treated patients were less likely to develop alcohol withdrawal delirium, uncomplicated AWS, or experience medication AEs compared to patients treated with a fixed-dose benzodiazepine-based protocol.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 70%
“…Two previous studies evaluated critically ill surgical-trauma patients receiving phenobarbital for AWS. 20,21 In a study of 31 patients receiving phenobarbital monotherapy, none of the patients developed AWS-related complications including seizures, alcoholic hallucinosis, or alcohol withdrawal delirium. 20 Another study of 60 patients receiving at least one dose of phenobarbital, initiated per provider discretion without protocol, suggested the time to initiation of phenobarbital was longer in patients with AWS-related complications.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%