Archive for December, 2009

The patient who abuses alcohol often is in denial about his addiction and frequently becomes unruly and obstinate as necessary detox measures and treatments are carried out. When the patient is elderly, additional issues can come into play, such as dementia and a poorly functioning immune system caused by years of drinking.

Increasing Numbers

Unfortunately, caring for elderly alcoholics is not an uncommon challenge. Studies find an increasing prevalence of alcoholism among older adults in health care settings. In fact, surveys show 6% to 11% percent of elderly people admitted to hospitals have symptoms of alcoholism, as do 20% in psychiatric wards and 14% in emergency departments.

Alcohol-related admission rates to acute care hospitals also have been found to be similar to those for myocardial infarction, and evidence shows the prevalence of problem drinking in nursing homes is as high as 49%.

Alcoholism itself can be a major concern, but when combined with medical problems associated with aging, care and treatment issues often are compounded. For instance, alcohol consumption causes more falls involving hip fractures in the elderly than would otherwise occur, due to their decreased bone density compared to elderly nonalcoholics.

Elderly drivers who have consumed alcohol are at greater risk for accidents; with age it takes less alcohol to interfere with coordination, judgment and medications.

Increased medication use and age-related liver degeneration means that older adults’ bodies cannot break down the drugs and eliminate them as quickly; this puts them at more risk to suffer adverse reactions. The heart, gastrointestinal tract, immune system and cognitive and motor functions of the brain also are negatively affected by alcohol consumption, and it has been found to increase the risk for some cancers.

Subtle Symptoms

Regardless of age, caring for a patient with alcoholism is a challenge. Unless someone reports the ED patient is an alcoholic, staff often have to look for subtle symptoms, according to Catherine Wilson, RN, a psychiatric nurse clinician at Virginia Commonwealth University Hospital, Richmond. “Most patients are not going to come to you and say they drink every day,” she said.

When a patient shows up in the ED with a fractured hip, sky-high blood alcohol level and is taking out his hostilities on caregivers, the important thing is to keep him from going into withdrawal, Wilson said. Symptoms of this can be a rising temperature, tremors, nausea and vomiting.

With the elderly, these syptoms can mean the patient may be deteriorating rapidly. He can go into delirium tremens, including hallucinations, as well as develop other symptoms—seizures, coma and even death. “People do die from alcohol withdrawal,” Wilson emphasized.

Decision Time

In the ED, many elderly alcoholic patients require surgery after a fall. The attending physician must decide what should come first, the surgery or detoxification. The anesthesiologist, in fact, may make the call to detox first, based on lab results showing magnesium deficiency and/or other abnormal values.

“Obviously, the risks of postponing any surgical intervention must be weighed against the risks of undergoing surgery,” said William J. Lorman, PhD, MSN, PsyNP, chief clinical officer at Livengrin Foundation in Bensalem, Pa., a facility caring for those requiring intervention due to alcohol or drug abuse.

Detox Measures

Wilson stressed, “There is a very fine balance with the elderly, because they tend to react to benzodiazepines [e.g., lorazepam, a commonly used detox drug], more than younger adults. Sometimes phenobarbitol is used instead.”

ED staff also must look for comorbidities such as high blood pressure and other sequelae that tend to accompany prolonged alcohol use.

“If surgery is urgent, the use of benzodiazepines will prevent withdrawal for up to 14 days,” Lorman said.

“Interestingly,” he noted, “the complications reported postoperatively are not secondary to alcohol withdrawal itself, but instead are related to infection, bleeding and delayed wound healing as a result of chronic alcohol misuse.”

By Bette Mooney who is a freelance writer and retired editor at ADVANCE.
    Handbook of Alcoholism Treatment Approaches (3rd Edition)
by Reid K. Hester, William R. Miller, Hester, Miller

Read more about this title…

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Alcohol and acute or chronic pancreatitis

Understanding of the relation between the alcoholic consumption and the development of pancreatitis should help in defining the alcoholic etiology of pancreatitis.

Although the association between alcohol consumption and pancreatitis has been recognized for over 100 years, it remains still unclear why some alcoholics develop pancreatitis and some do not.

Surprisingly little data are available about alcohol amounts, drinking patterns, type of alcohol consumed and other habits such as dietary habits or smoking in respect to pancreatitis preceding the attack of acute pancreatitis or the time of the diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis.

This review summarizes the current knowledge. Epidemiological studies clearly show connection between the alcohol consumption in population and the development of acute and chronic pancreatitis.

In the individual level the risk to develop either acute or chronic pancreatitis increases along with the alcohol consumption. Moreover, the risk for recurrent acute pancreatitis after the first acute pancreatitis episode seems also to be highly dependent on the level of alcohol consumption.

Abstaining from alcohol may prohibit recurrent acute pancreatitis and reduce pain in chronic pancreatitis.

Therefore, all the attempts to decrease alcohol consumption after acute pancreatitis and even after the diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis should be encouraged.

Smoking seems to be a remarkable co-factor together with alcohol in the development of chronic pancreatitis, whereas no hard data are available for this association in acute pancreatitis.

Setting the limits for accepting the alcohol as the etiology cannot currently be based on published data, but rather on the ‘political’ agreement.

Research article; Alcohol consumption in patients with acute or chronic pancreatitis. Sand J, Lankisch PG, Nordback I. Pancreatology. 2007;7(2-3):147-56.

Brief-TSF can assist patients cease alcohol consumption.

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Alcohol, Other Drugs, and Behavior: Psychological Research Perspectives

summerEmpathy Ability Is Impaired in Alcohol-Dependent Patients

Empathy is a complex form of psychological inference in which observation, memory, knowledge and reasoning are combined to yield insights into the thoughts and feelings of others.

The aim of this study was to evaluate the level of empathy in a sample of alcohol-dependent (alcoholic) patients in comparison to a control sample.

One hundred and fifty alcoholic subjects were consecutively recruited. All of the subjects successfully detoxified have been evaluated with the Empathy Quotient (EQ) and then compared with 107 control subjects.

  1. The level of empathy was significantly lower in the group of alcoholic subjects than in the control sample (p <.001).
  2. Differences with respect to gender and psychiatric comorbidity have also been observed.
  3. A low level of empathy could be a psychological trait typically observed in pre-morbid alcoholic personalities.

Further, the lack of empathy could lead latent abusers to find in the alcohol misuse something enabling them to compensate for their intrinsic weakness

Research report; Empathy Ability Is Impaired in Alcohol-Dependent Patients. Giovanni Martinotti;  Marco Di Nicola;  Daniela Tedeschi;  Sante Cundari; Luigi Janiri. American Journal on Addictions, Volume 18, Issue 2 March 2009 , pages 157 – 161

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N Alcohol screening brief intervention and referral in the emergency department an implementation study

INTRODUCTION: Alcohol is the single greatest contributor to injury in the United States. Numerous studies have reported that a standardized screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) intervention can effectively minimize future alcohol consumption, reduce injury recurrence, and decrease the number of repeat ED visits. To date, SBIRT studies have been conducted in settings in which physicians or research assistants carried out SBIRT. Little is known about ED nurses carrying out SBIRT. The purpose of this study was to examine ED nurse training needs and identify both barriers to, and enablers of, SBIRT implementation in the emergency department.

METHODS: Two coordinators from each of the 5 ED sites selected for the study attended a 1-day SBIRT educational session. Site coordinators then trained their staff nurses to conduct SBIRT. Site coordinators were surveyed at the midpoint and end of the 6-month implementation study period. Patient data from each facility was collected.

RESULTS: Ten site coordinators were trained and held subsequent training sessions with nursing staff in their respective emergency departments. All sites encountered barriers to implementation, but 2 of 5 sites were able to implement the SBIRT process fully by the end of the evaluation period. A total of 3265 patients were screened for alcohol use problems. Of those screened, 678 (21%) were classified as hazardous drinkers. Overall, 56% of the positive-screened patients received 3 to 5 minutes of a brief intervention. After the brief intervention, between 9% and 82% of patients were referred for further care.

DISCUSSION: The SBIRT process can be conducted successfully by emergency nurses. However, substantial operational barriers to widespread routine implementation exist. These barriers need to be addressed before emergency nurses incorporate SBIRT as routine part of ED care.

Research; Desy PM, Perhats C. Alcohol screening brief intervention and referral in the emergency department an implementation study. J Emerg Nurs. 2008 Feb;34(1):11-9. Epub 2007 Dec 3.

See also;

Brief-TSF professional training is complimentary to this training.

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