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   Alacholism (Addiction & Recovery board)

1st November 2004
I'm not sure about the rules here for linking to other sites, but this is info I found on one of the first sites that popped up when I googled "alcohol withdrawl death".

"Alcohol Withdrawal
There are several distinct but not mutually exclusive clinical syndromes caused by alcohol withdrawal:

Activation syndrome - characterized by tremulousness, agitation, rapid heart beat and high blood pressure.
Seizures - acute grand mal seizures can occur in alcohol withdrawal in patients who have no history of seizure or any structural brain disease.
Hallucinations - usually visual or tactile in alcoholics
Delirium tremens - can be severe and often fatal.
Unlike withdrawal from opioids such as heroin, which can be very unpleasant but is rarely fatal, alcohol withdrawal can kill (by uncontrolled convulsions) if it is not properly managed by a doctor. The pharmacological management of alcohol withdrawal is based on the fact that alcohol, barbiturates and benzodiazepines have remarkably similar effects on the brain and can be substituted for each other. Since benzodiazepines are the safest of the three classes of drugs, alcohol consumption is terminated and a long-acting benzodiazepine, e.g., ValiumŪ is substituted to block the alcohol withdrawal syndrome. The benzodiazepine dosage is then tapered slowly over a period of days or weeks."
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