Posts Tagged ‘effects of alcohol on the body’

The Effects of Alcoholic Beverages

Saturday, November 28th, 2009

The effects of alcohol are directly related to its concentration in the blood (Blood Alcohol Level) depending on a number of factors like the speed at which a person drinks, presence of food in stomach, his weight, the type of beverage, situation etc.

  1. The weight of the drinker is also a factor related to the effect of alcohol. People with higher weight shall have higher BAC, because of the way alcohol circulates in the body fluid.
  2. Some beverages have higher alcoholic content than other, beer has usually 4-8 percent alcohol (ethanol) where as distilled spirit have 40-60 percent.
  3. New or inexperienced drinkers may drink much more than what they can handle. Surrounding situation can also have an impact on the effect of alcohol.

Short and Long Term health Hazards

Short term effects of alcoholism are those which disappear within a few hours after the intake of alcoholic beverage. Alcohol affects the brain and nerve cells, which in turn affect human behavior. The brain is highly sensitive even to low dose or concentration of this depressant. The disturbances which result are shown in the activities of the organs, controlled by the brain. The most prominent short term effect of alcohol is that it temporarily removes or suppresses normal inhibitions. It acts as a psycho-anaesthetize, temporarily erasing painful feelings of anxiety. Worry, tension, frustration and also anger.

Long Term Effects: When large doses of alcohol are taken over a long period of time, it proves disastrous, impairing both length and quality of life. The long term effects include cirrhosis of liver, Pancreatitis, ulcers, gastritis, cardiomyopathy, and polyneuritis.

Tolerance for alcohol increases if a person continues to drink excessively for a long period of time. A situation comes when a heavy drinker becomes physically and psychologically dependent on alcohol.

Large dosage of alcohol decreases appetite and the quantity of food ingested and thus promotes under nutrition. By interfering with the absorption of folic acid it may lead to Folic Acid Deficiency Anemia. Sex life is also affected adversely by prolonged use of alcohol.

Let’s Not Forget This Also: Alcohol causes about half of all night time road accidents. It causes a third of all industrial accidents. It is an important factor in marriage break-up, child abuse and crime. If you drink one bottle of wine a day your chances of being killed by drink in the next year are one in 1,333.

Learn the effects of alcohol

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Alcohol has become the most abused drug today. The term alcohol was derived from the word ‘al-kohl’ which means ‘finely divided spirit’. There are many types of alcohol – methyl, ethyl, butyl, isopropyl etc., which have a number of chemical and industrial uses. Intoxicating ingredient of the alcoholic beverages is ethyl alcohol (C2H6O). Contrary to the popular belief, alcohol is a depressant rather than a stimulant.

Alcohol is obtained by the process of fermentation. Sugar containing juice of certain fruits and vegetables is converted into alcohol by action of several species of bacteria and yeast in the absence of oxygen. Although fermentation by yeast cells for the production of alcohol was known for a long time, but it was LOUIS PASTEUR who first elaborately studied and explained the process in detail and also utilized it for making different kinds of liqueurs Later BUCKNER in 1897 exposed that the change of sugars into alcohol and carbon dioxide was due to the action of an enzyme complex-cymas, secreted by the microorganism and not due to their direct action on sugar. Higher alcohol containing beverages are made by the process of distillation. Distillation is a process of heating of liquid until it turns into vapor and then condensing it into liquid again. When wine or beer is heated at high temperature, the alcohol boils of as a vapor, water and most of other ingredients are left behind. The process is employed to make beverages that contain 40-60% alcohol, and are called distilled spirit. Congeners are used to add color and flavor during commercial preparation.

Alcohol, after reaching the stomach is absorbed into the blood stream directly, the remaining part moves down to the intestines & is absorbed once again into the blood stream. From the blood alcohol enters all the body tissues and starts affecting the heart rate, blood pressure, gastric secretion, urine output etc. After activity of cerebral cortex, the depressant effect of alcohol spreads to neurons in the cerebral cortex itself and to other cerebral and spinal neurons. Its major effect is overall depression. Movement becomes slower and less accurate, so that even simple activities such as walking or speaking are adversely affected. Mental processes are impaired as well. Studies show that the ability to learn is slowed down and the ability reason and make rational judgment is also affected.

The body gets rid of alcohol almost exclusively by oxidation and this process begins in the liver. It is oxidized at the rate4 of 8-15 ml per hour. Alcohol is first changed into acetaldehyde & then to acetate by the enzyme aldehydrogenase, ultimately alcohol is converted into carbon dioxide, water and energy. The energy yield of alcohol oxidation is about seven kilo calories per gm of alcohol. Popular belief is that exercise, fresh air, cold shower hot bath or black coffee will help in making a person sober. This is not true at all. The fact is that these methods have no effect on oxidation rate. Ethyl alcohol supplies empty calories without any nutritive value.

Alcohol adversely affects the liver cells, eventually brings about their death and replacement by collagen fibers. The liver enlarges, hardens and develops other changes characteristic of cirrhosis chances of an alcoholic, acquiring this condition are many times more than a teetotaler.