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Ethylene Glycol

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Clinical & Forensic Alcohol Level – Toxicology, Overdose, Impairment & Metabolic Disorders)

Synonyms

  • Ethanol
  • Ethyl alcohol
  • Blood alcohol concentration (BAC)
  • Serum ethanol
  • Alcohol level
  • Blood alcohol level (BAL)

Units of Measurement

  • mmol/L
  • µmol/L
  • mg/dL
  • mg/100 mL
  • mg%
  • mg/L
  • µg/mL

Key Conversions

1 mg/dL = 0.217 mmol/L
1 mg/dL = 10 mg/L
1 µg/mL = 1 mg/L
mg/dL = mg% = mg/100 mL

Legal BAC units:

  • mg/dL
  • mg%
  • mg/100 mL
  • g/L, g/dL (regional)

Description

Ethanol is the primary ingredient of alcoholic beverages.
Clinically, ethanol levels are used for:

  • Alcohol intoxication
  • Ethanol poisoning
  • Trauma evaluation
  • Liver disease
  • Ketoacidosis workup
  • Forensic/legal purposes

Ethanol is absorbed rapidly, mainly via:

  • Stomach
  • Small intestine

Metabolized mostly in the liver by:

  • Alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH)
  • MEOS (microsomal ethanol-oxidizing system)
  • Catalase (minor route)

Physiological Role

Ethanol has no physiological role - it is purely a xenobiotic (foreign substance).

It affects:

  • CNS
  • Respiratory centers
  • Cardiovascular system
  • Metabolic pathways

Clinical Significance

High Ethanol Levels

1. Acute Alcohol Intoxication

Symptoms depend on concentration:

Ethanol Level (mg/dL)Clinical Effect
20–50Mild euphoria, decreased inhibition
50–100Impaired coordination, judgment
100–200Marked incoordination, ataxia
200–300Confusion, vomiting, drowsiness
300–400Stupor, coma
>400Respiratory depression; potentially fatal

2. Alcohol Poisoning

  • Respiratory failure
  • Hypoglycemia
  • Lactic acidosis
  • Aspiration risk
  • Hypothermia

3. Chronic Alcoholism

Ethanol may be elevated due to:

  • High tolerance
  • Slow clearance
  • Altered metabolism

Long-term effects:

  • Liver cirrhosis
  • Pancreatitis
  • Cardiomyopathy
  • Neuropathy

4. Metabolic Disorders

Mimics or worsens:

  • Diabetic ketoacidosis
  • Alcoholic ketoacidosis
  • Hypoglycemia

Low / Undetectable Levels

Expected in sober individuals.

Reference Ranges / Legal Limits

(CDC + Forensic Standards + Mayo)

Normal

  • 0 mg/dL (no ethanol)

Social drinking

  • 10–50 mg/dL (0.01–0.05 g/dL)

Driving legal limits

Varies by country:

  • 80 mg/dL (0.08 g/dL): USA, India
  • 50 mg/dL (0.05 g/dL): Europe, Australia
  • 20 mg/dL (0.02 g/dL): zero-tolerance zones

Toxic

  • >300 mg/dL (coma risk)

Potentially fatal

  • >400–500 mg/dL

Diagnostic Uses

1. Diagnose Alcohol Intoxication

  • Emergency cases
  • Altered mental status
  • Trauma
  • Unexplained metabolic derangements

2. Forensic & Legal Testing

  • Drunk-driving cases
  • Workplace screening
  • Post-mortem toxicology
  • Medico-legal injury assessment

3. Alcohol Use Disorder Evaluation

Useful in conjunction with:

  • GGT
  • CDT (carbohydrate-deficient transferrin)
  • AST/ALT ratio

4. Ketoacidosis & Metabolic Disorders

Differentiates:

  • Alcoholic ketoacidosis
  • DKA with alcohol intoxication

5. Monitoring Withdrawal or Detox

Helps determine timing & severity of withdrawal.

Analytical Notes

  • Serum or plasma (fluoride tubes for legal testing to prevent fermentation)
  • Enzymatic assay (ADH method) for clinical labs
  • Gas chromatography (GC) for forensic accuracy
  • Volatile compound → sample must be sealed properly
  • Hemolysis minimal effect
  • False positives: fermentation in unpreserved samples

Clinical Pearls

  • Ethanol is the most commonly tested toxin in emergency settings.
  • Levels do not correlate perfectly with clinical symptoms in chronic drinkers (tolerance).
  • Hypoglycemia is common in intoxication - check glucose in all cases.
  • Co-ingestion with methanol or ethylene glycol requires specific testing.
  • Ethanol acts as a competitive substrate for alcohol dehydrogenase and can inhibit metabolism of methanol/ethylene glycol.

Interesting Fact

Ethanol metabolism generates acetaldehyde, responsible for hangover symptoms, vasodilation, flushing, and DNA damage.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Toxicology.
  2. CDC Alcohol & Health Statistics.
  3. NIH Alcohol Research Center.
  4. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Ethanol.
  5. ARUP Consult - Toxic Alcohol Testing.
  6. SOFT/AAFS Forensic Toxicology Standards.
  7. MedlinePlus / NIH - Alcohol Test.

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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