Alcohol affects most important organs within the human body. Alcohol interacts with the gamma amino butyric acid receptors located in the brain. These receptors are the center of…
Task 2.2 Explanation of how others in social networks may provide support to Richard and Sophie.…
Alcohol is consumed orally and depending on how strong the alcohol, your weight, gender, or you ethnicity determines how fast it travels through your body. Alcohol is classified as a depressant because it slows the body down. It affects your motor skills such as talking and perception.…
The symptoms and consequences associated with severe alcohol consumption also vary greatly; that is, in some individuals only a few may be present. These may consist of the development of physical dependence manifested as a state of physical discomfort or hyperexcitability (tremors or shakes) that is reduced by continued consumption; the development of tolerance to the effects of alcohol, which leads individuals to increase their consumption; accidents while intoxicated; blackouts, characterized by loss of memory of events while intoxicated; work problems, including dismissal; loss of friends and family association; marital problems, including divorce; financial losses, including bankruptcy or continual unemployment. Medical problems can include gastric ulcers, pancreatitis, liver disease, and brain atrophy. The last is often associated with cognitive deficiencies, as shown by the inability to comprehend relatively simple instructions or to memorize a series of numbers. See also: Cognition…
Once you start to drink it starts to affect your body immediately, you might be a lightweight if you weigh less, but for heavier people it will take a few more. Approximately 20% of alcohol is absorbed through the stomach. The 80% other percent is absorbed through the small intestine. The way you get drunk is that you liver can only process a one ounce of liquor an hour. If you drink…
The liver is in charge of breaking down all of the alcohol in the body (“Alcohol Alert” 2). The liver can only handle about one drink per hour. When someone drinks more than one to two drinks an hour, they are more likely to pass out or black out. Also, liver diseases are able to develop from alcohol abuse. One disease being Liver Cirrhosis. Liver Cirrhosis is basically a disease that kills the liver very slowly. Luckily, there are many symptoms…
The second gateway drug is alcohol. Alcohol is found in beer, liquor, wine and wine coolers. It is a depressant which means it slows down your nervous system and your ability to think, speak, move, or other things you normally could do. You can legally drink in the U.S. when you turn 21. Your Blood Alcohol Concentration(BAC) is how much alcohol is in your blood. It is written as a decimal and the legal limit is 0.08. Alcohol effects everyone differently. Some factors that affect BAC are age, weight, gender,…
Moderate use of alcohol may have a beneficial effect on the human body. However, when alcohol is consumed in large amounts in a short period of time, and on a regular basis, that person is at risk of becoming addicted to alcohol. (Health Check Systems). One major issue of alcoholism, is when a person tries to quit, they become violent, depressed, or even suffer from anxiety attacks. (The Sobriety Solution). Alcohol is also known to contribute to liver problems, and cancers. Alcoholism may cause many cancers such as, Throat Cancer, Liver Cancer,…
I. Alcohol is a general term denoting a family of organic chemicals with common properties. Members of this family include ethanol, methanol, isopropanol, and others. This introduction discusses the physical, chemical, and physiological aspects of the most commonly ingested of these - ethanol. I will give a speech to explain what alcohol can do to you and those around you, both physically and socially. What happens to students that do drink, what can happen with the police, and what…
The rate that metabolism is released is critical in determining how much alcohol the body can break up and in determining the effect of the alcohol itself on the body. In the average human body, the liver can break apart one ounce of hard alcohol (liquor) (or one standard drink) in one hour. When you consume more than your body can digest, your digestive system becomes saturated (bloating with alcohol in the tissue), and the additional alcohol will continue to accumulate in the blood and body tissues until it can be metabolized. That‘s why having a lot of shots or playing drinking games can result in high blood saturation and high alcohol concentrations that last for several…
"Alcohol does all kinds of things in the body, and we're not fully aware of all its effects," says James C. Garbutt, MD, professor of psychiatry at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine and a researcher at the university's Bowles Center for Alcohol Studies. "It's a pretty complicated little molecule."…
Alcohol is a depressant that slowly begins to have an effect on the functions of the body. The alcohol quickly enters the bloodstream and then is carried throughout the body. The effect of excessive use of alcohol affects every system in the body, especially the brain, liver, and heart. These effects it has on the body is significant.…
When a person consumes alcohol, that alcohol that a person drinks shows up in the breath because it gets absorbed from the mouth, throat, stomach and intestines into the bloodstream. Alcohol is not digested upon absorption or chemically changed in the bloodstream. As the blood goes through the lungs, a physiologically predictable amount of the alcohol will moves across the lung membranes and into the lungs themselves.…
The term “alcoholism” describes a drinker who is mentally and physically dependent on alcohol, and who would most likely have withdrawal symptoms upon trying to quit. This dependence prevents most alcoholics from being able to control when they drink and how much they drink. For that reason, alcoholics usually drink to excess despite the consequences. Alcoholism, like any addiction, is a chronic disorder which involves continued use despite negative consequences and requires ongoing treatment and management. This research paper will cover many aspects of alcoholism including the causes and effects of drinking and different treatment approaches.…
When people drink alcohol, it travels through the body in their bloodstream. Alcohol reaches every…