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Alcohol

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Louis Pasteur (1822 1895) In the late 1800's Dr William Osler described alcohol as: ... 'Alcohol is the anaesthesia by which we endure. the operation of life. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Alcohol


1
Alcohol
2
In wine there is health Pliny the Elder (AD
23) Throughout history wine has been described
as the most healthful and most hygienic of
beverages Louis Pasteur (18221895) In the late
1800s Dr William Osler described alcohol
asthe most valuable medicinal agent and the
milk of old age Alcohol is the anaesthesia by
which we endure the operation of life.George
Bernard Shaw (18561950)
Alcohol
3
Patients and Alcohol (1)
  • Many common presentations to GPs will have
    alcohol as an underlying cause or as a
    contributory factor
  • Research estimates that I in 6 GP patients are
    drinking at levels that affect their health
  • Because alcohol, and heavy drinking, is so well
    accepted in the Australian community many health
    and social problems that are associated with
    alcohol are overlooked or go unrecognised.

Alcohol
4
Patients and Alcohol (2)
  • It is estimated that there are over 500,000
    alcohol dependent people in Australia
  • Only 10 receive some form of treatment,
    including self help groups
  • Only 1 are prescribed anti-craving drugs
  • (in contrast to the estimated 30 of opioid
    dependent people who are in treatment)

5
Rationale for GP Involvement
  • patient preference Research shows that
    patients expect and want their GP to ask about
    lifestyle issues such as their drinking. Patients
    are more comfortable about this than GPs
  • evidence of efficacy There is 25 years of
    research evidence that shows that GP treatment
    works well in addressing alcohol-related problems
  • size of problem Alcohol-related problems impact
    significantly on the workload of GPs.
  • There is a strong case for GP involvement with
    patients drinking behaviour. It includes

Alcohol
6
Common Alcohol-related GP Presentations
  • These are examples of common presenting problems
    among patients who are not likely to be alcohol
    dependent, but rather who drink more than
    recommended either on occasion or regularly.
  • GP intervention to reduce patient drinking levels
    to low risk levels
  • a) works and
  • b) improves clinical and costeffectiveness of
    treatment.
  • Examples include
  • GI problems (esp. Monday morning)
  • high blood pressure
  • sleep disorders (esp. insomnia)
  • injuries
  • anxiety problems
  • depression
  • marital discord
  • child abuse.

Alcohol
7
Alcohol
8
Acute Alcohol-related Harms
  • Physical injury and psychological harms and death
    arise from
  • falls, physical assaults, sexual assaults, DV,
    RTA, occupational and machinery injuries, fires,
    drowning, child abuse, unprotected sex leading to
    STDs, overdose, comorbidity, dehydration, sleep
    disturbances, raised blood pressure, shortness of
    breath.

Alcohol
9
Patient Focus
  • Traditionally, health concerns about alcohol were
    directed at middle-aged and older men
  • Increasingly, there are health concerns about the
    drinking patterns of young people
  • Women's drinking patterns are also increasingly
    risky.

GP attention needs to be directed to possible
alcohol-related problems with young people, women
and also older age groups.
Alcohol
10
What Patients Think
Alcohol
adapted from Wallace Haines (1984)
11
Alcohol
  • Still the most popular drug
  • over 80 of population drinks
  • 8 drink daily, peak in males 60 yrs (23). 40
    drink weekly
  • At-risk drinking now defined by NHMRC as
  • risks of harm in the long term (chronic harm)
  • risks of harm in the short term (acute harm)
  • Important role for GPs in giving advice
    consistent with NHMRC risk levels.

Alcohol
12
Australias Drinking Guidelines
  • Australias drinking guidelines were developed by
    the NHMRC.
  • See www.nhmrc.gov.au

Alcohol
13
Who drinks?
Age
Alcohol
14
A Standard Drink
Alcohol
15
Risky Drinking Levels
(for chronic harm)
Alcohol
16
High and Low Risk Drinking Levels For Short- and
Long-Term Harm
Alcohol
NHMRC Alcohol Guidelines (2001)
17
Risky Drinking Patterns
  • 34 of drinkers (gt14 years) put themselves at
    risk of alcohol-related harm, in the short term,
    on at least one occasion over 12 months
  • Over one in 10 females aged 1419, and over one
    in six males aged 2029, put themselves at risk
    of alcohol-related harm, in the short term
  • 60 of 2029 year olds drink in a risky manner
  • 12 do so at least weekly.

Alcohol
18
Drinking Patterns for Acute Harm
ABSTAINERS
  • High Risk
  • M gt11 SD p.d.
  • F gt7 SD p.d.
  • Risky
  • M gt7 SD p.d.
  • F gt5 SD p.d.
  • Low Risk
  • M 6 SD p.d.
  • F 4 SD p.d.

High Risk M gt 11 SD p.d. F gt 7 SD p.d.
LOW RISK
RISKY / HIGH RISK
Risky M gt 7 SD p.d. F gt 5 SD p.d.
Low Risk M 6 SD p.d. F 4 SD p.d.
Alcohol
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Risky Drinking Patterns
Percentage of the population who drink at medium
to high risk levels for acute harm at least once
a month (2001)
Alcohol
20
Drinking Patterns for Chronic Harm
ABSTAINERS
High Risk M gt7 SD p.d. F gt5 SD p.d.
HIGH RISK
Risky M 5 - 6 SD p.d. F 3 - 4 SD p.d.
RISKY
LOW RISK
Low Risk M 4 SD p.d. F 2 SD p.d.
1 Standard Drink (SD) 10g of alcohol
Alcohol
21
Indigenous Drinking Patterns

Alcohol
22
Alcohol Induced Memory Loss
  • Teenagers (28.4) were most likely to have memory
    loss incident following drinking
  • 4.4 reported blackouts occurred on weekly
    basis
  • 10.9 reported blackouts on a monthly basis
  • Memory loss occurred after drinking for
  • 12 male drinkers aged gt40 years
  • 7 female drinkers aged gt40 years
  • 20-30 of all other age groups.

Alcohol
23
Alcohol andDays of Work or Study Missed
Alcohol
24
Alcohol
NDRI (2000)
25
Predisposing Factors for High Risk Drinking
  • Family history of alcohol problems
  • Childhood problem behaviours related to impulse
    control
  • Poor coping responses in the face of stressful
    life events
  • Depression, divorce or separation
  • Drinking partner
  • Working in a male dominated environment.

Alcohol
26
Young People and Alcohol
  • Risky and harmful levels may
  • interfere with normal development
  • - physiological
  • - social
  • - emotional
  • increase risk of
  • - suicide
  • - risky sexual behaviour/ unwanted sex
  • cause blackouts
  • contribute to poor academic performance
  • contribute to, or cause, mental health problems
  • cause behavioural problems.
  • Risk of alcohol-related harm increased due to
  • smaller physical size
  • fewer social controls
  • peer values that condone intoxicated behaviour
  • risk of overdose due to lack of tolerance
    (physical, behavioural).

NHMRC (2001)
Alcohol
27
People With Concurrent Mental Health Problems
  • Alcohol may
  • exacerbate existing mental health problems
  • interact with prescribed medications
  • reduce or exacerbate the effect of certain
    medications
  • reduce patient compliance with treatment regimes.

Alcohol
28
Women and Alcohol
  • Women are more susceptible to the effects of
    alcohol due to
  • smaller physical size
  • decreased blood volume
  • lower body water fat ratio
  • reduced ADH activity in gastric mucosa (hence
    reduced stomach metabolism of alcohol).
  • Resulting in
  • earlier development of organ damage
  • increased risk of intoxication related harms
    e.g. assault, injury.

Alcohol
29
Foetal Alcohol Syndrome
  • The increasing prevalence
  • of risky drinking by young
  • women has raised concerns
  • about foetal alcohol
  • syndrome / effects.
  • GPs are well placed to give
  • sound preventive advice.

Alcohol
30
Alcohol Effects on Brain
  • No single receptor - interacts with and alters
    function of many different cellular components
  • Primary targets are GABA, NMDA glutamate,
    serotonin and ATP receptors
  • Stimulates dopamine and opioid systems
  • Effects of chronic consumption are opposite to
    acute because of homeostatic compensation.

Alcohol
31
Alcohol and the Opioid System
  • Alcohol consumption ? production and release of
    opioid peptides
  • mediate euphoric and rewarding effects of alcohol
    by ? dopamine release in the mid brain
  • Opioid antagonists (e.g. naltrexone)
  • blunt the euphoria-inducing effects of alcohol
  • suppress priming effect of alcohol, limit amount
    consumed and peak BAC reached
  • Individuals with family history of alcohol
    dependence have an ? rise in ? endorphin with
    alcohol.

Alcohol
32
Pharmacokinetics
2 excreted unchanged in sweat, breath urine
  • Rapidly absorbed into blood by stomach (20)
    and small intestine (80)
  • Distributed in body fluids (not fat)
  • 1 standard drink per hour raises BAC by approx.
    0.010.03 g.

Alcohol
33
Effects of Alcohol Intoxication
Alcohol
34
Types of Problems
  • Different patterns of drug use result in
    different types of problems.
  • Drug use may affect all areas of a patients life
    and problems are not restricted to dependent drug
    use.

Regular/excessive Use health finances relationship
s child neglect
Intoxication accidents / injury poisoning /
hangovers absenteeism high risk behaviour
Dependence impaired control drug-centred
behaviour anxiety / isolation / social
problems withdrawal
Alcohol
35
Types of Problems
  • Different patterns of drug use result in
    different types of problems.
  • Drug use may affect all areas of a patients life
    and problems are not restricted to dependent drug
    use.

Regular/excessive Use health finances relationship
s child neglect
Intoxication accidents/injury poisoning/hangovers
absenteeism high-risk behaviour
Dependence impaired control drug-centred
behaviour anxiety/isolation/social
problems withdrawal
Alcohol
36
How can Thorleys Model of Alcohol-related Harm
be Applied to the Following?
  • A man sitting on a beach who
  • is alone, drinking a single can of beer, goes for
    a swim, and leaves in his car
  • is alone, having completed a 6-pack over a few
    hours, decides to go for a swim before driving
    home
  • in the company of his children, consumes a 6-pack
    over a few hours, and takes them swimming before
    driving them home
  • goes to the beach everyday, along with his dog
    and his esky, and consumes one or two 6-packs
    during the afternoon before driving home.

Alcohol
37
Types of Problems
Intoxication
  • Regular Use
  • Vein damage
  • InfectionsOrgan Disease
  • Relationships
  • Financial

Alcohol
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Types of Problems
Intoxication
  • Dependence

Regular Use
  • Withdrawal
  • Craving
  • Obsessive
  • Cognitive Conflict
  • Loss of Control

Alcohol
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Types of Problems Youth
Intoxication
Dependence
Regular Use
Alcohol
40
Types of Problems Elderly
Intox.
Dep.
Regular Use
Alcohol
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Types of ProblemsClinical Samples
Intox.
Dependence
Regular Use
Alcohol
42
Binge Drinking
  • Binge drinking can lead to
  • increased risk taking
  • poor judgment/decision making
  • misadventure/accidents
  • increased risky sexual behaviour
  • increased violence
  • suicide.

Alcohol
43
Harms Associated with High Risk Alcohol Use
  • Hypertension, CVA
  • Cardiomyopathy
  • Peripheral neuropathy
  • Impotence
  • Cirrhosis and hepatic or bowel carcinomas
  • Cancer of lips, mouth, throat and oesophagus
  • Cancer of breast
  • Foetal alcohol syndrome.

Alcohol
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Harms Associated with High-risk Alcohol Use
  • Hypertension, CVA
  • Cardiomyopathy
  • Peripheral neuropathy
  • Impotence
  • Cirrhosis and hepatic or bowel carcinomas
  • Cancer of lips, mouth, throat and oesophagus
  • Cancer of breast
  • Foetal alcohol syndrome.

Alcohol
45
Alcohol-related Brain Injury
  • Cognitive impairment may result from consumption
    levels of gt70 grams per day
  • Thiamine deficiency leads to
  • Wernickes encephalopathy
  • Korsakoffs psychosis
  • Frontal lobe syndrome
  • Cerebellar degeneration
  • Trauma.

Alcohol
46
Alcohol
Courtesy of Dr. John Sherman, St. Kilda Medical
Centre
47
Alcohol
Courtesy of Dr. John Sherman, St. Kilda Medical
Centre
48
Alcohol
Courtesy of Dr. John Sherman, St. Kilda Medical
Centre
49
Alcohol Dependence
It has been estimated that alcohol dependence is
more common than dependence on all other drugs
combined in the Australian adult population, and
over 17 times as common as opioid dependence.
Hall et al. (1998)
Alcohol
50
Case Study
  • Meg, a 47 year old woman, always has alcohol on
    her breath and frequently falls. She moved into
    the suburb a few months ago and is well known at
    the local bottle shop and hotel. She denied
    alcohol use until a recent fracture and hospital
    admission. Since her discharge she has started
    drinking again, mostly spirits.
  • She presents to you late one afternoon seeking
    benzodiazepines.
  • As her new GP, how will you respond?
  • If her alcohol use continues, how can harm be
    reduced?

Alcohol
51
Drug Alcohol Interactions
  • CNS depressants
  • e.g. benzodiazepines
  • Antipsychotics, antidepressants
  • Opioid analgesics, antihistamines (some)
  • Hypoglycaemics (chlorpropamide), metronidazole,
    cephalosporins (some)
  • Confusion, depressed respiration
  • Decreased metabolism, toxicity CNS depression
  • CNS depression
  • Facial flushing, headache

Alcohol
52
Alcohol-related Problems in General Practice
  • Most drinkers in general practice tend to be
  • non-dependent (binge) drinkers who may experience
    intoxication-related harm
  • people who regularly drink at risky levels
  • responsive to brief intervention strategies e.g.
    self-help materials.

Although GPs should be encouraged to
intervene with all problem drinkers, alcohol
dependent drinkers may require additional
specialist assistance.
Alcohol
53
Interventions and Treatment for Alcohol-related
Problems
  • Screening and Assessment ? individualised
    interventions
  • Brief intervention and Harm Reduction strategies
  • Withdrawal management
  • Relapse prevention / goal setting strategies
  • Controlled drinking programs
  • Residential programs
  • Self-help groups.

Alcohol
54
Screening Tools
Alcohol
55
Brief Intervention
  • Consider the patients
  • perspective on drinking
  • attitudes to drinking goals
  • significant others
  • short-term objectives.
  • Provide
  • information on standard drinks, risks, and risk
    levels
  • encouragement to identify positive alternatives
    to drinking
  • self-help manuals
  • follow-up session.

Alcohol
56
Two Steps Towards Alcohol Brief Intervention (BI)
  • 1. Screening
  • E.g. the alcohol AUDIT, a 10-item questionnaire.
  • 2. Intervention
  • Information
  • Brief counselling
  • Advice
  • Referral (if required).

Alcohol
57
What Does AUDIT Measure?
The items measure
  • Questions 13 Quantity and frequency of alcohol
    use
  • Questions 46 Possible dependence on alcohol
  • Questions 710 Alcohol-related problems
  • AUDIT Scores Risky levels 812
  • Possible dependence gt13

Alcohol
58
Suitability of AUDIT as a BI Tool
  • SUITABLE FOR
  • anyone over 16 years
  • routine assessment of all new patients
  • hospital admissions
  • pre-operative assessment,employment medicals
    etc.
  • LESS WELL SUITED
  • if physically or psychologically unwell, or have
    cognitive impairment
  • in Emergency Departments
  • for palliative care
  • if alcohol-related damage present
  • with poor literacy skills
  • if withdrawal/dependence evident.

Alcohol
59
AUDIT The FLAGS Approach
  • After administering the AUDIT use FLAGS.
  • Feedback results
  • Listen to patient concerns
  • Provide Alcohol education and information
  • Goals of treatment identify and plan
  • Strategies discussed and implemented.

Alcohol
60
Using FRAMES for Brief Interventions (BI)
  • Feedback personal risk or impairment
  • Emphasise personal Responsibility for change
  • Provide clear Advice on how to change
  • Offer a Menu of alternative change options
  • Use therapeutic Empathy as a counselling style
  • Enhance client Self-efficacy or optimism.

Alcohol
61
Harm Reduction Strategies
  • Benefits of cutting down or cutting out
  • save money
  • be less depressed
  • lose weight
  • less hassles for family
  • have more energy
  • sleep better
  • better physical shape.
  • Reduce the risk of
  • liver disease
  • cancer
  • brain damage
  • high blood pressure
  • accidents
  • injury
  • legal problems.

Alcohol
62
Choosing a Treatment Option
Alcohol
63
Withdrawal
  • Usually occurs 624 hours after last drink
  • tremor
  • anxiety and agitation
  • sweating
  • nausea and vomiting
  • headache
  • sensory disturbances hallucinations.
  • Severity depends on
  • pattern, quantity and duration of use
  • previous withdrawal history
  • patient expectations
  • physical and psychological wellbeing of the
    patient (illness or injury)
  • other drug use/dependence
  • the setting in which withdrawal takes place.

Alcohol
64
Progress of Alcohol Withdrawal from Time of Last
Drink
deCrespigny Cusack (2003) Adapted from NSW
Health Detoxification Clinical Practice
Guidelines (20002003)
Alcohol
65
Home-based Withdrawal Management
  • Is suitable when
  • the GP is able, available and willing!
  • carer support is available
  • patient has organised responsibilities and
    commitments (e.g. work)
  • patients physical and emotional condition is
    appropriate.

Alcohol
66
Home-based Withdrawal
Medications for Symptomatic Treatment
  • Diazepam
  • Thiamine ?100 mg daily multivitamins
  • Antiemetic
  • Analgesia (e.g. paracetamol)
  • Antidiarrhoeal.

Alcohol
67
Post-withdrawal Management
  • GP options
  • retain in treatment, ongoing management
  • seek referral.
  • Considerations
  • patients wants (abstinence or reduced
    consumption, remaining your patient)
  • severity of problems.
  • Pharmacotherapies
  • acamprosate
  • naltrexone
  • disulfiram (not PBS listed).

Alcohol
68
Acamprosate
  • Derivative of the amino-acid taurine (calcium
    bis acetyl homotaurine)
  • Complex pharmacological actions
  • Interacts with the GABAA receptor, facilitating
    inhibitory neurotransmission
  • ? glutamate excitatory neurotransmission
    interacts with NMDA glutamate receptor.

Alcohol
69
Naltrexone and Acamprosate
  • Effective
  • Work well with variety of supportive treatments
    e.g. brief intervention, CBT, supportive group
    therapy
  • Start following alcohol withdrawal proven
    efficacy where goal is abstinence, uncertain with
    goal of moderation
  • No contraindication while person is still
    drinking, although efficacy uncertain
  • Generally safe and well tolerated.

Alcohol
70
Clinical Guidelines
  • Naltrexone 50 mg daily
  • indicated especially where strong craving for
    alcohol after a priming dose
  • ? likelihood of lapse progressing to relapse
  • LFTs lt x3 above normal
  • side effects nausea headache.
  • Acamprosate 600 mg (2 tabs) tds
  • indicated especially where susceptible to
    drinking cues or drinking triggered by withdrawal
    symptoms
  • low potential for drug interactions
  • need normal renal function
  • side effects diarrhoea, headache, nausea, itch.

Alcohol
71
Disulfiram
  • Acetaldehyde dehydrogenase inhibitor 200 mg
    daily
  • ? unpleasant reaction with alcohol ingestion
  • Indications alcohol dependence goal of
    abstinence need for external aid to abstinence
  • Controlled trials ? abstinence rate in first 36
    months
  • Best results with supervised ingestion
    contingency management strategies.

Alcohol
72
SSRIs
  • ? alcohol consumption by 20 (low dependence
    drinkers), effect wears off after 12 months
  • No increase in abstinence rates in alcohol
    dependence
  • No change in overall alcohol intake in alcohol
    dependence
  • Reserved for patients with persistent depression
    after withdrawal completed.

Alcohol
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