Alchohol - French Flashcards

1
Q

At what rate is alcohol metabolized?

A

7-10 grams/hour. (Coors light has 12,000 mg = 12g).

Results in a 0.015 - 0.020 decrease in BAC/hr.

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2
Q

What is the elimination kinetics of EtOH?

A

Zero order. (Once the enzyme pathways are saturated, it proceeds at a constant rate, regardless of the amount ingested/BAC)

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3
Q

What is the primary metabolic pathway for EtOH? Where is it located, and what are the enzymes involved. What is the end product?

What other metabolites are formed?

A

Alchohol dehydrogenase in the liver is responsible for the majority of metabolism.

EtOH–dehydrogenase–> Acetaldehyde –> Acetic acid

Also see INcrease in NADH and LACTATE

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4
Q

At higher BAC (0.05 - 0.18), what enzyme system kicks in?

A

CYP2E1. Metabolizes 10-25% at high BAC.

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5
Q

On what enzyme does disulfiram act?

What are the effects?

A

Inhibits acetaldehyde dehydrogenase, which normally converts acetaldehyde–> acetic acid. This is the same enzyme missing in some asians.

Buildup of acetaldehyde causes orthostatic hypotension, flushing, nausea, headache.

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6
Q

Women generally have higher body fat percentages than men. Why does this make their BAC higher for a given amt of alcohol (assume same kg mass)?

A

EtOH distributes in water. Fat contains little water, so the concentration in the blood/plasma ends up being higher.

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7
Q

What does a brethalyzer measure?

A

0.05% of the BAC is exhaled as EtOH, unmetabolized.

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8
Q

What is the effect of EtOH on GABA/Glu neurons?

A

A CNS depressant, so

facilitate GABA
inhibit Glu-NDMA

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9
Q

Which reaction, alcohol dehydrogenase or acetaldehyde dehydrogenase, reduces NAD to NADH?

A

Both.

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10
Q

What are some effects of NADH buildup (eg failure to regenerate NAD)

A

1) increased blood lactate–> acidosis
2) increased Mg secretion–> convulsions
3) increased Acetyl CoA–> increase fatty acid synthesis and decrease fat breakdown = fatty liver
4) Increase NADH–> hypoglycemia (stop krebs, stop gluconeogenesis.
5) Decrease uric acid excretion–> gout attack

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11
Q

What causes pancreatitis in heavy drinkers?

A

Increased digestive secretions.

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12
Q

What are long-term effects of drinking on the liver?

A

Fatty change–> collagen deposition–> cirrhosis –> increased venous pressure leads to esophageal varicosities, ascites, increased bleed time due to clotting factor decrease.

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13
Q

What are some features of Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome (AWS)? At what time (hours) does each typically occur?

A
Seizures (6-48 hours)
Visual hallucination (12-48 hours)
Delirium tremens (48-96 hours)

In mild withdrawal, see anxiety, restlessness, tremor, etc.

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14
Q

A patient presents with no medical history, exhibiting external ophthalmoplegia, nystagmus, ataxia of gait, pain, loss of sensation, and weakness of the arms and legs.

Treat with?

A

Thiamine. B1

Wernicke’s encephalopathy

Response is good, most patients recover fully.

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15
Q

What differentiates Korsakoffs psychosis from Wernickes?

A

Symptoms of Korsakoffs include severe amnesia and personality alterations.

Irreversible.

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16
Q

What is the diagnostic criteria for Fetal Alcohol syndrome?

What is the incidence?

A

Prenatal or postnatal growth retardation AND altered morphogenesis (especially facial dysmorphology) AND CNS involvement (often mental retardation).

1 in 1000 to 1 in 300 (1 in 3 for heavy drinkers).

17
Q

What are the effects of FAS by trimester?

A

1st: Major morphologic abnormality
2nd: Increased risk of spontaneous abortions
3rd: Decreased fetal growth

18
Q

The FDA has not established a safe maximum for alcohol during pregnancy. At what level of drinking is risk established?

A

3 oz/day (6 drinks)

**Peak BAC is critical, probably should not excceed 2 drinks/day

19
Q

Aspirin + alcohol =

A

GI bleed

20
Q

An alcoholic with normal liver function would be at (increased or decreased) risk for acetaminophen toxicity?

A

increased. (CYP2E1 induction)

21
Q

A non alcoholic will have (faster/slower) metabolism when intoxicated?

A

Slower

22
Q

An alcoholic with severe liver disease will have (faster/slower) metabolism when intoxicated?

A

Slower

23
Q

An alcoholic might experience withdrawal symptoms after taking which two drugs?

A

Metronidazole

oral hypoglycemics

24
Q

Treat AWS with?

A

Benzos (chlordiazepoxide, lorazepam)

Clonidine

25
Q

Name 3 drugs that can reduce alcohol consumption (tx of alcoholic) and their mode of action.

A

Disulfiram–> Antabuse. Inhibit acetaldehyde dehydrogenase

Naltrexone–> Opioid antagonist. Can be used in Tx of alcohol (reduces craving, used in combo with psychotherapy)

[ OR opioid addiction (will not reduce craving in opioid addiction, only block effects) pp104 handout]