Alcohol Detox in Cherry Hill, NJ
Alcohol withdrawal is one of the only substance withdrawal syndromes that can be directly life-threatening — making medically supervised alcohol detox essential for anyone with significant alcohol dependence. Hope Harbor Addiction Center in Cherry Hill provides 24/7 medically supervised alcohol detox for Camden County and South Jersey residents, using evidence-based CIWA-Ar protocols and physician oversight throughout the withdrawal process. Call us at (732) 523-5239 — we are available around the clock.
Why Alcohol Withdrawal Is Medically Serious
Many people are surprised to learn that alcohol withdrawal — not opioid withdrawal — carries the highest risk of fatal complications of any substance. This is because chronic heavy alcohol use fundamentally alters the brain's neurochemistry. Alcohol is a CNS (central nervous system) depressant that enhances GABA (an inhibitory neurotransmitter) and suppresses glutamate (an excitatory neurotransmitter). After months or years of heavy drinking, the brain compensates by reducing GABA sensitivity and increasing glutamate activity.
When alcohol is abruptly removed, the brain is left in a hyperexcitable state — with diminished inhibition and excess excitation. This imbalance is what drives alcohol withdrawal symptoms, and in severe cases it produces:
- Seizures: Alcohol withdrawal seizures typically occur 24–48 hours after the last drink and can be generalized tonic-clonic ("grand mal") seizures. They can occur even in people who have never had a seizure history.
- Delirium Tremens (DTs): A severe withdrawal syndrome occurring in 3–5% of people undergoing alcohol withdrawal. DTs involve profound confusion, hallucinations, severe autonomic instability (fever, rapid heart rate, high blood pressure), and can be fatal without treatment. DTs typically emerge 48–72 hours after stopping.
- Wernicke's Encephalopathy: A neurological emergency caused by thiamine (Vitamin B1) deficiency, common in people with long-term heavy drinking. Untreated, it progresses to Korsakoff syndrome with permanent memory impairment. Thiamine administration is standard in all medically supervised alcohol detox.
For more information on the alcohol withdrawal timeline, see our detailed guide on alcohol withdrawal symptoms and our page on how long alcohol detox takes.
The CIWA-Ar Protocol: How We Measure Alcohol Withdrawal Severity
Hope Harbor's clinical team uses the Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol, Revised (CIWA-Ar) — the gold standard tool for assessing alcohol withdrawal severity and guiding medication decisions. CIWA-Ar evaluates ten withdrawal symptom domains:
- Nausea and vomiting
- Tremor
- Paroxysmal sweats
- Anxiety
- Agitation
- Tactile disturbances (numbness, tingling, burning)
- Visual disturbances
- Auditory disturbances
- Headache
- Orientation and clouding of sensorium
CIWA-Ar assessments are conducted by nursing staff at regular intervals throughout detox. Scores guide benzodiazepine dosing — ensuring patients receive enough medication to prevent dangerous complications without over-sedation.
Medications Used in Medical Alcohol Detox
Our physicians prescribe medication protocols tailored to each patient's withdrawal severity, medical history, and co-occurring conditions:
- Benzodiazepines: The primary treatment for alcohol withdrawal. Chlordiazepoxide (Librium) and lorazepam (Ativan) are most commonly used. These medications work on the same GABA receptors as alcohol, stabilizing the nervous system and preventing seizures.
- Thiamine (Vitamin B1): Given to all patients — typically 100mg IV or IM — to prevent Wernicke's encephalopathy, which can occur in people with long-term heavy drinking due to thiamine depletion.
- Anti-nausea medications: Ondansetron (Zofran) and other antiemetics to manage nausea and vomiting during withdrawal.
- Blood pressure and heart rate management: Beta-blockers or clonidine may be used to manage autonomic hyperactivity during withdrawal.
- Multivitamins and nutritional support: Alcohol use disorder commonly causes nutritional deficiencies; repletion is part of standard detox care.
What Happens After Alcohol Detox
Medical alcohol detox safely manages the physical withdrawal process — but detox alone does not treat alcohol use disorder. Research consistently shows that people who complete detox without entering a follow-on treatment program have very high rates of relapse, often within days or weeks.
After completing alcohol detox at Hope Harbor, patients transition to one of our treatment programs based on clinical assessment:
- Inpatient/Residential Rehab: For patients with severe alcohol use disorder, prior treatment history, unstable living situations, or co-occurring mental health conditions. Provides 24/7 structure and intensive behavioral treatment. See our full alcohol treatment program.
- Partial Hospitalization or IOP: For patients with strong social support and stable home environments who can step down to day or evening programming.
The transition from detox to treatment — with no gap in care — is critical. Hope Harbor manages this transition seamlessly within our facility.
Ready to Start Recovery? Our Cherry Hill Team is Available 24/7.
Free, confidential assessments. Insurance accepted. Same-day intake available.
Alcohol Detox FAQs
Frequently Asked Questions
Alcohol withdrawal is one of the few substance withdrawal syndromes that can be directly life-threatening. Alcohol depresses the central nervous system; chronic heavy drinking causes the nervous system to compensate by becoming hyperexcitable. When alcohol is removed, this hyperexcitability is unmasked, potentially causing seizures, severe autonomic instability, and delirium tremens (DTs). Medically supervised detox monitors for and treats these complications before they become life-threatening.
The Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol, revised (CIWA-Ar) is a standardized 10-item clinical assessment tool used to measure the severity of alcohol withdrawal symptoms. Trained clinicians score patients on symptoms including tremor, sweating, anxiety, agitation, nausea, and perceptual disturbances. The CIWA-Ar score guides medication decisions — ensuring patients receive appropriate amounts of benzodiazepine treatment, neither over- nor under-medicating. Hope Harbor's nursing staff uses CIWA-Ar monitoring throughout the alcohol detox process.
Benzodiazepines are the primary medications used in alcohol detox because they work on the same GABA receptors as alcohol and prevent seizures. Long-acting benzodiazepines like chlordiazepoxide (Librium) or lorazepam (Ativan) are most commonly used. Thiamine (Vitamin B1) is always given to prevent Wernicke's encephalopathy, a serious neurological complication of alcohol withdrawal. Additional comfort medications, anti-nausea drugs, and blood pressure management may also be used depending on individual needs.
Alcohol withdrawal symptoms typically begin 6–24 hours after the last drink, peak between 24–72 hours, and largely resolve by day 5–7 for most people. The most dangerous window — when seizures and delirium tremens (DTs) are most likely — is between 24 and 72 hours after stopping. For more detailed information, see our page on how long alcohol detox takes.
Detox addresses physical dependence on alcohol but does not treat the underlying alcohol use disorder. Research clearly shows that people who complete detox without further treatment have very high relapse rates. After detox, Hope Harbor transitions patients to our alcohol treatment program — inpatient or outpatient depending on clinical assessment — which provides the behavioral therapy, coping skills, and support needed for lasting recovery.
Ready to Start Recovery? Our Cherry Hill Team is Available 24/7.
Free, confidential assessments. Insurance accepted. Same-day intake available.