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Posts Tagged ‘Excessive drinking’

Binge drinking on New Years Eve can be fatal.

New Year’s Eve is around the corner and this provides the perfect excuse to party and celebrate. About 90 percent of the alcohol consumed during this time will be in the form of binge drinking.

This kind of drinking can result in alcohol poisoning. It is said and defined by consuming alcohol in rapid succession (about five drinks for men and four drinks for women). The National Institute for Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism defines binge drinking as a pattern of drinking that brings a person’s blood alcohol concentration to 0.08 grams percent or above.

Alcohol poisoning symptoms to look for are confusion or stupor, vomiting, seizures, slow or irregular breathing, blue-tinged skin or pale skin, low body temperature, and unconsciousness. Alcohol poisoning can lead to coma and death. Long term effects may include stomach ulcers, liver problems, cardiovascular disease, sexual dysfunction, and neurological damage.

Alcohol is also a major factor in vehicular accidents and deaths, unintended pregnancies, domestic violence, and sexual assault.

A person with alcohol poisoning needs emergency treatment immediately. Even when someone has stopped drinking, alcohol continues to be released into the bloodstream and the level of alcohol continues to rise. Do not encourage the person to vomit the alcohol. If they are suffering from alcohol poisoning, their gag reflex is impaired, and they may choke or inhale their own vomit which could cause a lung injury.

Source of this article.

Alcohol’s Effects on The Brain

I’d like to share with you some information on the effects of alcohol on the brain that I’ve learned in an alcohol education class.

After two or more drinks the effects on the brain will be difficulty walking, blurred vision, slurred speech, and impair memory. Alcohol destroys brain cells and unlike many other types of cells in the body, brain cells do not regenerate. Alcohol acts as a sedative on the central nervous system, depressing the nerve cells in the brain, dulling, altering and damaging their ability to respond appropriately. Excessive drinking over a prolonged period of time can cause serious problems with cognition and memory.

Alcoholism physical symptoms and how they effect a person is different for everyone:

  • How much and how often a person drinks;
  • The age at which he or she first began drinking, and how long he or she has been drinking;
  • The person’s age, level of education, gender, genetic background, and family history of alcoholism;
  • Whether he or she is at risk as a result of prenatal alcohol exposure; and
  • His or her general health status.
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