💊 B-Vitamin Series — Water-Soluble

Vitamin B1 (Thiamine)
Clinical Dose Calculator

SIGN/WHO/EFNS-aligned dosing for Wernicke encephalopathy, beriberi, alcoholic neuropathy, and deficiency states. All routes and forms.

SIGN Protocol IV · IM · Oral Benfotiamine Paediatric & Adult ⚠️ Glucose Before Thiamine = Wernicke Risk
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Critical Clinical Warning
NEVER administer IV Glucose/Dextrose before Thiamine in malnourished, alcoholic, or prolonged-vomiting patients. Glucose without thiamine depletes residual stores and can precipitate acute Wernicke encephalopathy — a medical emergency with 20% mortality if untreated.

Thiamine Dose Calculator

SIGN / WHO / EFNS / Indian RNTCP Guidelines

Step 1 — Clinical Context
EMERGENCY
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Wernicke Encephalopathy
IV high-dose protocol
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Beriberi
Wet (cardiac) / Dry (neuro)
Neuropathy / Alcohol
Alcoholic, diabetic, toxic
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Deficiency / Prophylaxis
Oral maintenance
Step 2 — Thiamine Form
Step 3 — Route
Step 4 — Specific Indication
Dose Recommendation
⚠️ Evidence-based guidance aligned with SIGN, WHO, and EFNS guidelines. Adjust based on clinical response and whole blood thiamine levels. Always use clinical judgement.
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Thiamine (Vitamin B1) — Complete Clinical Reference

SIGN protocol, Wernicke grading, beriberi types, benfotiamine pharmacology, and thiamine-glucose interaction.

1. Biochemistry and Metabolic Roles

Thiamine (vitamin B1) is a water-soluble B-vitamin that functions as an essential cofactor — as thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP), its active form — in three critical enzymatic reactions: pyruvate dehydrogenase (glycolysis → Krebs cycle entry), α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (Krebs cycle), and transketolase (pentose phosphate pathway). These reactions are central to carbohydrate metabolism and neuronal energy production.

Unlike fat-soluble vitamins, thiamine is not stored in large quantities. Total body stores are only 25–30 mg, primarily in skeletal muscle, heart, liver, and kidney. With a biological half-life of ~18 days, clinically significant deficiency can develop within 2–3 weeks of dietary absence or increased demand — making it uniquely dangerous in acute settings.

FormWater SolubilityBioavailabilityKey Feature
Thiamine HClHigh (water-soluble)Standard; ~3.7% at 100 mg doseUniversal; first-line IV/IM for emergencies
BenfotiamineLow (fat-soluble prodrug)3.6× higher than HCl; better intracellularSuperior for neuropathy; oral only
Thiamine Pyrophosphate (TPP)HighActive coenzyme; moderateSpecialty; combination products
Thiamine MononitrateModerateLower than HClFood fortification; OTC supplements

2. Wernicke–Korsakoff Syndrome

Wernicke encephalopathy (WE) is an acute neurological emergency caused by thiamine deficiency, classically occurring in alcoholics but increasingly recognised in non-alcoholic patients — bariatric surgery, hyperemesis gravidarum, malignancy, prolonged TPN, and eating disorders. It is dramatically underdiagnosed in clinical practice.

The Classic Triad — and Its Limitations

The classic Wernicke triad (confusion/encephalopathy, ophthalmoplegia, ataxia) is present in only ~16% of confirmed cases at autopsy. Any one feature in a susceptible patient is sufficient clinical justification for emergency IV thiamine. The cost of under-treating is catastrophic; the cost of over-treating is negligible.

At Risk
100 mg/day PO
Alcohol users; poor nutrition
Probable WE
250 mg IV/IM/day
≥1 Triad sign; alcohol hx
Confirmed WE
500 mg IV TDS
2–3 days; then 250 mg/day
Korsakoff
500 mg IV TDS
+ Long-term oral 100 mg TDS

SIGN Protocol (Recommended)

Clinical ScenarioDoseRouteDuration
Active Wernicke Encephalopathy500 mg TDSIV (100 mL NS, 30 min)2–3 days minimum
Post-loading maintenance250 mg once dailyIV or IM5 days
Oral step-down100 mg TDSOralIndefinitely in alcoholics
Alcohol detox (high risk)500 mg TDSIVUntil eating normally
Alcohol detox (standard)250 mg once dailyIV or IM3–5 days
Prophylaxis (at-risk outpatient)100 mg TDS oralOralOngoing
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Korsakoff Psychosis — Irreversible in 80%
Untreated or inadequately treated Wernicke encephalopathy progresses to Korsakoff psychosis (anterograde amnesia, confabulation, personality change) in the majority of cases. Korsakoff is irreversible in approximately 80% of patients. This is why aggressive early IV thiamine is non-negotiable — it is the only intervention that prevents transition.

3. Beriberi — Still Clinically Relevant

Beriberi remains an important diagnosis in India (rice-eating populations in eastern and northeastern states, institutional settings, alcoholics), parts of Southeast Asia, and increasingly in bariatric post-operative patients globally. It manifests in two major forms:

Wet Beriberi (Cardiac)

High-output cardiac failure — the pathognomonic presentation. Thiamine deficiency causes peripheral vasodilatation, sodium and water retention, and compensatory high cardiac output, eventually leading to cardiac decompensation. Clinical features: bounding pulse, warm peripheries, oedema, elevated JVP, cardiomegaly. The response to IV thiamine within 24–48 hours is so dramatic that it serves as a diagnostic test in itself.

Dry Beriberi (Neurological)

Peripheral neuropathy — symmetric, distal, ascending motor and sensory neuropathy, predominantly affecting the lower limbs. Unlike wet beriberi, recovery from dry beriberi is slow and incomplete. The pathophysiology involves axonal degeneration rather than the purely functional cardiac changes of wet beriberi.

TypeLoading DoseRouteDurationNotes
Wet Beriberi100 mgIV daily7–14 daysECG monitor; response in 24–48h diagnostic
Dry Beriberi50–100 mgIV or IM daily14 days → oralRecovery slower; continue oral for months
Infantile Beriberi10–25 mgIV or IM7 daysTreat lactating mother concurrently: 100 mg TDS
Maintenance (all)25–50 mgOral TDS6 weeks → dietaryAddress underlying nutritional cause
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Beriberi in Infants
Infantile beriberi occurs in breastfed infants of thiamine-deficient mothers. The infant presents with acute cardiac failure (wet) or neurological symptoms (dry) while the mother may appear asymptomatic or have only mild symptoms. Treat the infant AND the lactating mother simultaneously.

4. Benfotiamine — Fat-Soluble Thiamine for Neuropathy

Benfotiamine (S-benzoylthiamine O-monophosphate) is an open-chain fat-soluble derivative of thiamine with fundamentally different pharmacokinetics. Unlike water-soluble thiamine HCl, benfotiamine is absorbed via passive diffusion through lipid membranes, achieving intracellular thiamine concentrations 3.6× higher than equivalent doses of thiamine HCl.

This superior intracellular bioavailability is clinically relevant for conditions where intracellular thiamine depletion drives pathology — particularly diabetic peripheral neuropathy and alcoholic neuropathy. Benfotiamine activates transketolase, shunting excess glucose metabolites away from pathological pathways (polyol, hexosamine, PKC, and AGE pathways) that mediate diabetic microvascular damage.

Benfotiamine Dosing

IndicationLoadingMaintenanceDuration
Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy300 mg BD150 mg BDLoading 4–6 weeks; then indefinite maintenance
Alcoholic Neuropathy300–600 mg BD150–300 mg BD4 weeks loading; long-term if ongoing alcohol use
Thiamine Deficiency Neuropathy300 mg BD150 mg BDUntil neurological improvement plateaus
Benfotiamine vs Thiamine HCl for Neuropathy
For established peripheral neuropathy, benfotiamine is superior to thiamine HCl due to higher intracellular levels. Take with food (fat-soluble — food improves absorption). In acute or emergent situations (Wernicke's, wet beriberi), only IV thiamine HCl is appropriate — benfotiamine is oral only.

5. The Thiamine–Glucose Interaction — A Critical Safety Rule

This is one of the most clinically important drug-nutrient interactions in emergency medicine. When a thiamine-deficient patient receives IV glucose (dextrose), the glucose load dramatically increases metabolic demand for thiamine. If thiamine stores are already critically depleted, this metabolic surge can precipitate acute Wernicke encephalopathy within hours.

The Rule — No Exceptions
In any patient who is: a chronic alcohol user, malnourished, has prolonged vomiting/hyperemesis, or is on prolonged IV fluids without nutrition — give thiamine IV or IM BEFORE or SIMULTANEOUSLY with any glucose-containing fluid. Never wait for blood thiamine levels before treating.

6. Thiamine in Pregnancy and Hyperemesis Gravidarum

Pregnancy increases thiamine requirements (RDA: 1.4 mg/day). The critical clinical scenario is hyperemesis gravidarum (HG) — severe persistent vomiting preventing oral intake — which can cause clinically significant thiamine depletion within 2–3 weeks. Every patient admitted with hyperemesis gravidarum and receiving IV fluids should receive concurrent IV thiamine.

ContextDoseRouteNotes
Hyperemesis (routine prevention)100 mg dailyIV or IMWhile on IV dextrose rehydration
Hyperemesis + Wernicke's signs500 mg TDS × 3 daysIVEmergency protocol — same as non-pregnant Wernicke's
Maintenance (HG resolving)50–100 mg TDSOralUntil normal diet resumed
RDA (all pregnancy)1.4 mg/dayOral (prenatal vitamins)All prenatal supplements contain thiamine

7. Laboratory Reference Values

Whole blood thiamine (as thiamine diphosphate, TDP) is the most reliable measure of thiamine status. Erythrocyte transketolase activity and ETKAC are functional measures that reflect thiamine availability at the enzymatic level.

TestNormalDeficiencyNotes
Whole blood thiamine (TDP)70–180 nmol/L<70 nmol/LMost reliable; gold standard
Serum/plasma thiamine8–30 nmol/L<8 nmol/LLess reliable; reflects recent intake
ETKAC (activation coefficient)<1.15>1.25 (functional deficiency)Measures enzyme saturation; not rapid
Urinary thiamine>100 mcg/g creatinine<27 mcg/g creatinine24-hour collection; reflects intake
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Don't Wait for Lab Results
In suspected Wernicke encephalopathy, do NOT delay thiamine treatment pending laboratory confirmation. Whole blood thiamine levels may take days to return. The clinical risk of under-treating far exceeds any risk from thiamine administration, which is essentially non-toxic even at high doses.

8. Frequently Asked Questions

What is the SIGN-recommended thiamine dose for Wernicke encephalopathy?
SIGN Guideline 74 recommends thiamine 500 mg IV (diluted in 100 mL normal saline, infused over 30 minutes) three times daily for a minimum of 2–3 days for confirmed or suspected Wernicke encephalopathy. Follow with 250 mg IV or IM once daily for 5 days. Then switch to oral thiamine 100 mg three times daily indefinitely in alcoholic patients.
Can IV thiamine be given as a rapid bolus?
Ideally no — IV thiamine should be diluted in 100 mL normal saline and infused over 30 minutes to reduce the (rare but reported) risk of anaphylaxis. However, in a genuine acute emergency, slow IV push (over 5–10 minutes) is acceptable. Anaphylaxis is rare (~1 in 5 million doses) and should not delay treatment.
Does benfotiamine cause any side effects?
Benfotiamine has an excellent safety profile. No significant toxicity has been reported even at high doses (600 mg/day). The main consideration is that it must be taken with food (fat-soluble absorption). It is not suitable for emergencies — IV thiamine HCl only for acute situations.
What is the thiamine dose for alcohol detoxification?
All inpatients admitted for alcohol detoxification should receive parenteral thiamine. SIGN protocol: for high-risk patients (poor nutritional state, suspected Wernicke's), 500 mg IV three times daily. For standard alcohol detox: thiamine 250 mg IV or IM once daily for 3–5 days, then oral 100 mg three times daily.
Why is oral thiamine inadequate in alcoholics?
Chronic alcohol use impairs thiamine at multiple levels: reduced dietary intake, reduced GI absorption (alcohol directly inhibits thiamine transporters THTR-1 and THTR-2), impaired hepatic phosphorylation to the active TPP form, and increased urinary losses. Parenteral (IV or IM) thiamine is required for reliable repletion.
What is the thiamine dose for children with beriberi?
Infantile beriberi: thiamine 10–25 mg IV or IM daily for 7 days, then oral 10 mg three times daily for 4–6 weeks. Critically — treat the lactating mother simultaneously with 100 mg three times daily orally. Older children: 25–50 mg IV or IM daily, transitioning to oral after clinical improvement.
Disclaimer: This calculator provides evidence-based guidance aligned with SIGN Guideline 74, EFNS guidelines, WHO nutrition protocols, and published clinical literature. Doses must be verified against current prescribing information and adjusted for individual patient factors. This tool is for use by qualified healthcare professionals and does not replace clinical judgement or direct medical consultation.