- Joined
- Oct 15, 2017
- Messages
- 832
- Reaction score
- 2,491
So, I had my first case of 100%, undoubtedly wernicke's encephalopathy this week. Damndest thing. Don't want to be too detailed and identifying but the pt had risk factors and was on PO thiamine. But they were also had been altered for more than a week. It was clearly a medical delirium, not a psychiatric illness. Didn't resemble the textbook for wernicke's encephalopathy much other than being altered. Prominent visual hallucinations. Various medical things going on, but nothing that could be correlated by timeline to the mental status.
I said, screw it, IV thiamine never hurt anyone. Patient had dramatic improvement over the next 24 hours and while not back to baseline the improvement has been stable. Humbling, considering how close I was to not making that recommendation.
Before this I'd had lots of cases where wernicke's was discussed in the differential, and plenty of given IV thiamine to, but none where it was this clear cut that the thiamine was the intervention that changed things.
Curious what other people's experience with wernicke's has been. Textbook teaching is that most cases don't have the triad, but given the variability in presentation, I wonder if there are any useful aspects to looking for specific clinical features in the symptoms at all, and instead going forward for unexplained deliriums I may base the decision to give thiamine solely on risk factors and not exam.
I said, screw it, IV thiamine never hurt anyone. Patient had dramatic improvement over the next 24 hours and while not back to baseline the improvement has been stable. Humbling, considering how close I was to not making that recommendation.
Before this I'd had lots of cases where wernicke's was discussed in the differential, and plenty of given IV thiamine to, but none where it was this clear cut that the thiamine was the intervention that changed things.
Curious what other people's experience with wernicke's has been. Textbook teaching is that most cases don't have the triad, but given the variability in presentation, I wonder if there are any useful aspects to looking for specific clinical features in the symptoms at all, and instead going forward for unexplained deliriums I may base the decision to give thiamine solely on risk factors and not exam.