Alcohol Use Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Roughly how many units is found in each of these drinks?

A

1 pint of beer (lager) - 3 units
1 large glass of wine - 3 units
1 25ml measure of spirit - 1 units
1 bottle of wine - 9/10 units

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2
Q

What percentage of the worlds population is estimated to drink alcohol and what percentage of the UK population is estimated to drink alcohol?

A

43% of the world population consumes alcohol

In UK, 80% of the population consumes alcohol

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3
Q

What is thought to be the lifetime prevalence of alcohol-use disorder in the western world?

A

7% to 10%

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4
Q

What is the gender ratio in alcohol-use disorder?

A

Male:female = 2:1

but it is thought that female alcohol-use disorder goes under-reported

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5
Q

What percentage of hospital inpatients are admitted to hospital and experience symptoms of alcohol withdrawal?

A

8%

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6
Q

What is the maximum number of units that the low-risk drinking guidelines indicate should be consumed per week?

A

men and women should not regularly drink more than 14 units per week

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7
Q

What percentage of the UK population drink at hazardous or harmful levels?

A

1 in4people drink at hazardous or harmfullevels

i.e. more than 14 units/week

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8
Q

What is meant by hazardous drinking?

A

Pattern of alcohol consumption that increases the risk of harmful consequences for the user

> 14 units and <35 units per week for females
14 units and <50 units per week for males

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9
Q

What is meant by Harmful drinking?

A

Pattern of alcohol consumption that is causing mental OR physical damage

> 35 units a week for women.

> 50 units a week for men.

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10
Q

What is meant by Alcohol Dependence?

A

Behavioural, cognitive and physiological factors that typically include:

  • a strong desire to drink alcohol
  • difficulties in controlling its use
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11
Q

How does the DSM V categorise Alcohol Use disorders?

A

Mild (2-3 of the symptom criteria)
Moderate (4-5)
Severe (>6)

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12
Q

What is the Alcohol use disorders identification test (AUDIT) ?

A
  • comprehensive 10 question alcohol harm screening tool

- developed by the World Health Organisation (WHO)

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13
Q

What are the score boundaries on the AUDIT tool which would organise patients into low, increased or high risk?

A

0-7 Low risk
8-15 = increased risk
16-19 = high risk
20+ = possible dependence

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14
Q

What does the Severity of Alcohol Dependence Questionnaire measure?

A
Physical withdrawal
Affective withdrawal
Withdrawal relief drinking 
Alcohol consumption 
Rapidity of reinstatement
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15
Q

What is the Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol (CIWA-AR) ?

A

10 item scale used in assessment and management of alcohol withdrawal:

  • Nausea and Vomiting
  • Tremor
  • Paroxysmal Sweats
  • Anxiety
  • Agitation
  • Tactile/auditory/visual disturbances
  • Headache/fuzzy head
  • Orientation
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16
Q

If a patient scores 0-7 on the AUDIT, how would you manage them?

A

They are low risk

=> reinforce current drinking patterns

17
Q

If a patient scores 8-15 on the AUDIT, how would you manage them?

A

They are at risk of hazardous drinking

=> Deliver a brief intervention

18
Q

If a patient scores 16-19 on the AUDIT, how would you manage them?

A

This is now Harmful drinking
=> deliver brief intervention
=> Motivational Enhancement Therapy session
=> consider prescribing options

19
Q

If a patient scores 20+ on the AUDIT, how would you manage them?

A

Comprehensive assessment

20
Q

What 6 elements should be included in a brief intervention?

A

FRAMES
Feedback - review problems caused by alcohol
Responsibility - patient responsible for change
Advice - reduction/abstinence
Menu - provide options to change behaviour
Empathy - use empathetic approach
Self-efficacy - encourage optimism

21
Q

What “States of Change” are involved in Motivational Enhancement Therapy?

A
Pre-contemplation
Contemplation
Planning
Action
Maintenance
Relapse
22
Q

What are the four principles of Motivational Enhancement Therapy?

A
  • Empathise by using reflective listening
  • Develop discrepancy between deeply held values and current behaviour
  • Respond with empathy/understanding rather than confrontation
  • Support self efficacy by building confidence in change
23
Q

What forms of psychosocial therapy can be used to prevent relapse

A
  • Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)
  • Motivational Enhancement Therapy (MET)
  • 12 Step Facilitation Therapy
  • Family and Couple Therapy
24
Q

What is the drug of choice for medically assisted alcohol detox?

A

Chlordiazepoxide

25
Q

What symptoms are usually associated with alcohol withdrawal symptoms?

A
  • Tremor, sweating, nausea, retching
  • Increased HR, BP
  • Anxiety/agitation
  • Insomnia
  • Auditory, visual, tactile hallucinations
  • Withdrawal seizures (0-48 hours)
  • Delirium tremens (48-72 hours) coarse tremor, confusion, delusions, hallucinations
26
Q

What are the main complications of withdrawal?

A
  • Seizures
  • Hallucinosis
  • Delirium Tremens
  • Wernicke-Korsakoff Syndrome
27
Q

What medications are licensed to prevent alcohol use relapse in the UK after successful withdrawal?

A

Acamprosate
Naltrexone
Disulfiram

28
Q

How does acamprosate act to reduce alcohol use relapse?

A
  • Acts on GABA and Glutamate transmission
  • corrects the neurotransmission imbalance post withdrawal
    => reduces craving
29
Q

How does naltrexone prevent alcohol use relapse?

A
  • Blocks opioid receptors

- Reduces reward effect mediated by endorphin system/opioid pathway

30
Q

How does disulfiram prevent alcohol use relapse?

A
  • Alcohol and Disulfiram cause unpleasant/dangerous reaction
    => Psychological deterrent
  • Anti craving effect through increased dopamine transmission