D.T.s Occurs when heavy drinkers are deprived of alcohol, or from mental shock. Hallucinations, during which he talks to himself. Imagines he is chased by horrible creatures: reptiles, birds, insects. Violent tremors, sleeplessness, irritability and fever require careful nursing in a darkened room. A small amount of alcohol may be necessary to ensure sleep. Overdoses of coffee can have a similar effect.
Alternatives. Teas. Hops, Passion flower. Motherwort (with heart symptoms). Oats.
Tablets/capsules. Motherwort, Passion flower. Mistletoe.
Powders. Formula. Passion flower 2; Hops (lupulin) 1; Jamaica Dogwood 1. Dose: 750mg (three 00 capsules or half a teaspoon) every 2 hours.
Tinctures. Formula. Equal parts: Passion flower; Hops; Oats. Dose: one to three 5ml teaspoons in water, every 2 hours.
Practitioner. Tincture Stramonium, Dr Fyfe, Eclectic Medical Review, advises: “With mania present in acute inflammation. Furious, noisy, raving: one drop Tincture Stramonium every two hours.”
Tincture Cinchona (Peruvian bark) BPC (1949). 2-4ml 2-3 times daily. 2-3 drops Tincture Capsicum enhances its action.
German traditional. Arnica. Suggest: Tincture Arnica, 2-5 drops in water 2-3 times daily.
A state of confusion accompanied by trembling and vivid hallucinations.
It usually arises in alcoholics after withdrawal or abstinence from alcohol.
Early symptoms include restlessness, agitation, trembling, and sleeplessness.
The person may develop a rapid heartbeat, fever, and dilation of the pupils.
Sweating, confusion, hallucinations, and convulsions may also occur.
Treatment consists of rest, rehydration, and sedation.
Vitamin injections, particularly of thiamine (see vitamin B complex), may be given.
(DTs) A distinct neurologic disorder suffered by late-inthe-game alcoholics, characterized by sensory confusion (is it red or sour, hot or loud, smelly or wet, am I thinking or screaming); part of the problem is the result of diminished myelination of nerves and decreased brain antioxidant insulation (cholesterol), with nerve impulses “shorting out” across temporary synapses. It sounds ugly.
an acute confusional state often seen as a withdrawal syndrome in chronic alcoholics (see alcoholism) and caused by sudden cessation of drinking alcohol. Features include anxiety, tremor, sweating, and vivid and terrifying visual and sensory hallucinations, often of animals and insects. Without medical treatment severe cases may end fatally.