Thiamine deficiency: Difference between revisions

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==Background==
*Most common cause: chronic alcohol abuse
*Other causes: malabsorption, hemodialysis, chronic protein-calorie undernutrition
*IV dextrose can precipitate in patients with marginal thiamine stores
==Clinical Features==
*Early/mild features:
**Anorexia
**Muscle cramps
**Paresthesias
**Irritability
*Advanced/severe deficiency
**See [[beriberi
**See [[Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome]]
==Differential Diagnosis==
{{Ethanol DDX}}
{{Vitamin deficiencies DDX}}
==Evaluation==
*Clinical diagnosis
==Management==
*[[Thiamine]] 50–100 mg IV for first few days, followed by 5-10mg PO daily
*Replete other vitamins/electrolytes that may also be depleted (e.g. banana bag, [[magnesium]], [[folate]], multivitamin)
*Replete thiamine '''before''' giving IV dextrose!
==See Also==
==See Also==
{{Thiamine deficiency types}}
{{Thiamine deficiency types}}
*[[Thiamine]]
*[[Thiamine]]
[[Category:Neurology]]
[[Category:Neurology]]

Revision as of 22:08, 22 December 2016

Background

  • Most common cause: chronic alcohol abuse
  • Other causes: malabsorption, hemodialysis, chronic protein-calorie undernutrition
  • IV dextrose can precipitate in patients with marginal thiamine stores

Clinical Features

  • Early/mild features:
    • Anorexia
    • Muscle cramps
    • Paresthesias
    • Irritability
  • Advanced/severe deficiency

Differential Diagnosis

Ethanol related disease processes

Vitamin deficiencies

Evaluation

  • Clinical diagnosis

Management

  • Thiamine 50–100 mg IV for first few days, followed by 5-10mg PO daily
  • Replete other vitamins/electrolytes that may also be depleted (e.g. banana bag, magnesium, folate, multivitamin)
  • Replete thiamine before giving IV dextrose!

See Also

Thiamine deficiency types