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Houndheart 04-08-2010 09:32 AM

Wet Brain
 
I asked last week about a term I heard "Dry Drunk". Now I am wondering about another one: "Wet Brain". I do not want to assume this just means a brain when one is drinking. What is it? Can one have it after stopping booze?

Fandy 04-08-2010 09:44 AM

the way I understood it , it may be a permanently impaired altered neurological status....?

but i'm no expert and i read briefly ( I think on this website early in February)? i will do a search.

Fandy 04-08-2010 09:47 AM


Wet Brain Syndrome is known by several names including Korsakoff psychosis, alcoholic encephalopathy, Wernicke's disease among others. The most common medical term for Wet Brain Syndrome is Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome and is caused by a deficiency in one of the B vitamins called thiamine. Thiamine is also occasionally referred to as vitamin B1. Thiamine is important for a large number of cellular processes, many of them involving glucose metabolism and amino acid synthesis. One of the reasons that thiamine deficiency can cause such havoc in the brain is because the brain, unlike other organs, needs a steady supply of glucose from the blood and does not have the ability to store it. Also, many neurotransmitters, like glutamate and aspartate are amino acids, while others depend on amino acids for their synthesis. In addition to Wet Brain Syndrome, thiamine deficiency can also lead to a disease called Beriberi.
Causes of Wet Brain Syndrome

One of the most common causes of thiamine deficiency, and therefore Wet Brain Syndrome, is alcoholism. People who have severe alcoholism will drink so much alcohol that they neglect getting nutrition from sources other than alcohol. This leads to B1 deficiency as well as overall malnutrition. Thiamine deficiency is also seen in people who eat a diet rich in polished rice since the process of polishing rice removes vitamin B1. People that undergo stomach bypass and stapling surgery can develop vitamin B1 deficiency and so can those who have long stays in an intensive care unit.
Symptoms of Wet Brain Syndrome

Wet Brain Syndrome is characterized by many different neurological and psychiatric symptoms. Two of the main symptoms, which are also seen in alcohol intoxication, are confusion and ataxia. This is why the disease is sometime difficult to diagnose in severe alcoholics. Many symptoms of Wet Brain Syndrome involve the eye including nystagmus (a lateral tremor of the eye), ophthalmoplegia (paralysis of the eye muscles), anisocoria (unequal pupil size) and sluggish pupil reflexes (the eyes only slowly react to light). Korsakoff's psychosis is characterized by amnesia, hallucination and confabulations. A confabulation is a fascinating psychiatric symptom in which people incorporate a fantasy or a figment of their imagination into their working memory. They are also extremely suggestible. An example of a confabulation is when a doctor, who has only just met a patient with Wet Brain Syndrome can easily convince him that they are long time acquaintances. The patient then begins to confabulate other instances in which the two have interacted.
A Serious Disease

Sadly, if left untreated, Wet Brain Syndrome can lead to coma or even death. In fact, if amnesia and psychosis have already occurred, it is unlikely that a full recovery will be achieved.
Wet Brain Syndrome

Houndheart 04-08-2010 11:27 AM

Whoa. Thanks Fandy. I had no idea.


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