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. 2013 Jun 5;8(1):11. doi: 10.1186/1940-0640-8-11

Table 4.

Immediate issues in the care of chronic heavy drinkers admitted to the hospital

Clinical issue Treatment
Assess risk for nutritional deficiency
• Thiamine supplementation.
• Possibly folate and multivitamin supplement.
Assess hydration status and electrolytes (risk for hypocalcemia and hypomagnesemia with or without hypokalemia and hypophosphatemia)
• IV or oral fluids.
• Oral or IV electrolyte replacement.
Risk for acute alcohol withdrawal
• Close observation with validated instrument or prophylactic benzodiazepine, particularly in those with previous withdrawals or history of severe withdrawal (delirium tremens or seizure).
• Prophylaxis still requires close observation for over or under-sedation.
Active alcohol withdrawal
• Symptom-triggered or scheduled benzodiazepine.
• Close observation with validated instrument with either symptom-triggered or scheduled dosing.
• Alternate medication (e.g., phenobarbital) in rare event that benzodiazepine is unsuccessful at controlling agitation.
• Possible beta blocker or clonidine for autonomic manifestations if benzodiazepine alone is insufficient.
• Possible haloperidol if benzodiazepine alone is insufficient for delirium.
  • Consider other causes of delirium.