The purpose of this study was to determine whether meeting  historical criteria for unsuspected Wernicke's encephalopathy (WE), largely  under-diagnosed in vivo, explains why some alcoholics have severe  neuropsychological deficits, whereas others, with a similar drinking history,  exhibit preserved performance.
 Demographic, clinical, alcohol related, and  neuropsychological measures were collected in 56 abstinent alcoholics and 38  non-alcohol-dependent volunteers. Alcoholics were classified using the clinical  criteria established by Caine et al (1997) and validated in their  neuropathological study of alcoholic cases.
 Our alcoholics who met a single  criterion were considered ‘at risk for WE’ and those with two or more criteria  with ‘signs of WE’. Whole blood thiamine was also measured in 22 of the  comparison group and 28 alcoholics.
 Of the alcoholics examined, 27% met no criteria, 57% were at risk for  WE, and 16% had signs of WE. Neuropsychological  performance of the alcoholic subgroups was graded, with those meeting zero  criteria not differing from controls, those meeting one criterion presenting  mild-to-moderate deficits on some of the functional domains, and those meeting  two or more criteria having the most severe deficits on each of the domains  examined. Thiamine levels were selectively related to memory performance in the  alcoholics. 
Preclinical signs of WE can be diagnosed in vivo, enabling  the identification of ostensibly ‘uncomplicated’ alcoholics who are at risk for  neuropsychological complications. 
The graded effects in neuropsychological  performance suggest that the presence of signs of WE explains, at least  partially, the heterogeneity of alcoholism-related cognitive and motor  deficits.
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