â– LECTURE OVERVIEW: Delirium Tremens (DTs) is the most severe and life-threatening manifestation of the alcohol withdrawal syndrome.
â– HYPEREXCITABLE NEURAL MECHANISMS:
1. Chronic GABA Drive: Chronic alcohol use continuously stimulates inhibitory GABA-A receptors, prompting down-regulation of these receptors, and continually blocks excitatory NMDA glutamate receptors, prompting up-regulation of NMDA receptors.
2. Abrupt Cessation: When alcohol is abruptly discontinued, the sudden loss of inhibitory GABA stimulation paired with an unregulated glutamatergic drive causes severe, systemic central nervous system hyperexcitability.
3. Autonomic Storm: Drives a severe sympathetic storm, characterized by extreme hypertension, hyperthermia, tachycardic arrhythmias, and psychomotor agitation.
â– SURGICAL LANDMARKS & ANATOMICAL BOUNDARIES:
Intraoperative access requires meticulous dissection along defined tissue planes. Avoid excessive traction near neurovascular bundles and look for key bony landmarks or fascial reflections to secure margins.
â– EMERGENCY DECREES & FAST-TRACK RESPONSES:
Upon presentation with extreme physiological disruption, initiate immediate volume restoration and broad-spectrum metabolic stabilization.
[HY-BOARD-1253]
🌟 Dynamic Clinical Key:
DTs typically begins 48-96 hours after the last drink, presenting with altered sensorium, disorientation, and vivid visual/tactile hallucinations (e.g., crawling insects). First-line treatment is aggressive intravenous Benzodiazepines (e.g., Diazepam, Lorazepam) to restore GABAergic inhibition and prevent status epilepticus. Never divide or ligate any vessel before clearly isolating and confirming its origin and termination. Confirm central vital markers continually rather than relying solely on peripheral readings.