Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T19:58:49.902Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Clinical Features and Diagnosis of Alcoholic Hallucinosis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

N. De Uribe-viloria*
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario De Valladolid, Psychiatry, Valladolid, Spain
A. Alonso Sanchez
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario De Valladolid, Psychiatry, Valladolid, Spain
M. De Lorenzo Calzon
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario De Valladolid, Psychiatry, Valladolid, Spain
M. Gomez Garcia
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario De Valladolid, Psychiatry, Valladolid, Spain
A. Alvarez Astorga
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario De Valladolid, Psychiatry, Valladolid, Spain
H. De La Red Gallego
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario De Valladolid, Psychiatry, Valladolid, Spain
R. Hernandez Anton
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario De Valladolid, Psychiatry, Valladolid, Spain
S. Gomez Sanchez
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario De Valladolid, Psychiatry, Valladolid, Spain
C. Noval Canga
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario De Valladolid, Psychiatry, Valladolid, Spain
G. Medina Ojeda
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario De Valladolid, Psychiatry, Valladolid, Spain
F. De Uribe Ladron De Cegama
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario De Valladolid, Psychiatry, Valladolid, Spain
*
*Corresponding author.

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.
Introduction

Alcoholic hallucinosis is a rare complication of chronic alcohol abuse, characterized by acoustic verbal hallucinations and delusions, mainly of a menacing content, arising in clear consciousness, that appear during or shortly after a period of heavy alcohol consumption.

Objectives and aims

To outline the key clinical features of alcoholic hallucinosis in order to improve differential diagnosis with other entities.

Methods

We studied the evolution of an outpatient followed in a Mental Health Centre of Valladolid and compared it with present data about the condition, found in a bibliographic search of articles no older than 10 years about the topic.

Results

Partial insight about the experience, along with clear consciousness, was key to discard other psychiatric diagnosis that also present acoustic hallucinations. Neuroimagining and functional tests in our patient showed moderate cognitive impairment and cortical atrophy, which contradicts other studies which claim that an acceptable level of cognition must be present in order to gain the necessary insight to meet the diagnostic criteria.

Conclusions

Alcoholic hallucinosis is a rare form of subacute encephalopathy, secondary to an abrupt stop in a previously chronic and heavy alcohol consumption. Its diagnosis is mainly clinical, and neuroleptics are the most used drug, being abstinence essential for an adequate evolution. The course is usually benign, although the acoustic phenomena may not disappear completely.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
e-Poster walk: Substance related and addictive disorders–part 1
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017
Submit a response

Comments

No Comments have been published for this article.