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10 answers

These awnsers are hilarious. If you overdrink your main damage is to you--you get dehydrated, therefore you feel like crap. You get nauseous, you feel lethargic, and you can feel your heartbeat. However, if you chronically abuse alcohol, worry about your liver and your pancreas, not your heart. Those are the organs most effected by alcohol abuse. I'm not saying have a drunken binge every once in awhile, we all do. But before you go to bed, try to drink a couple of glasses of water, take a motrin and brush your teeth. You'll feel better and the taste in your mouth won't make you want to vomit. Never take tylenol after drinking-it is also processed by your liver.

2007-09-01 21:23:30 · answer #1 · answered by jcrs0421 1 · 2 1

Overdrinking in a single binge can cause the heart to slow down, as well as the repiratory system, causing the heartbeat to become irregular or even stop. This is caused by lack of oxygen to the heart muscle, the same thing which causes heart attacks.

2007-09-01 22:19:51 · answer #2 · answered by Gray Wanderer 7 · 2 0

While many individuals addicted to ethanol have subclinical abnormalities of the heart, somewhat less than a majority develop symptomatic cardiac problems. These include heart failure and arrhythmias. In addition to supraventricular arrhythmias that often normalize spontaneously, there is an increased incidence of sudden death that peaks at about 50 years of age in the alcoholic population. A significant degree of blood pressure elevation occurs in individuals who abuse alcohol. This appears to be transient and is normalized in most individuals during abstinence. The increased incidence of hemorrhagic and nonhemorrhagic stroke in middle age also appears to decline when alcohol abuse is interrupted.

2007-09-01 20:55:52 · answer #3 · answered by cowboy in scrubs 5 · 2 0

When you drink an excessive amount of alcohol, you have trouble breathing so in the end your heart needs to work harder to circulate the enough amount of oxygen your brain needs to function, thus resulting in heart failure or stroke.Even though its not a common problem, theres still a possibilty.

2007-09-01 20:53:18 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

I don't know why, but sometimes my heart hurts after a night of really overdoing it. I can feel my heartbeat on the outside of my chest and I feel like a few steps will make me pass out.

I guess over time, the heart just can't take that kind of abuse. I'll let you know how it goes.

2007-09-01 20:47:09 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Research indicates that moderate drinkers are less likely to suffer heart attacks than are abstainers or heavy drinkers.
Please see the web pages for more details on Alcohol and cardiovascular disease.

2007-09-01 21:42:42 · answer #6 · answered by gangadharan nair 7 · 2 0

i will allow you to be conscious of what happens ok? first of all, it is not ok to drink any variety of alcohol on a similar time as pregnant, and 2d, while a pregnant woman beverages alcohol, that youngster is at an significant danger of springing up fetal alcohol spectrum problems. The affected infant may well be mentally not on time with a low IQ or they could have particular getting to understand disablities whether their IQ is established or extreme, they go through irreversible suggestions harm in spite of IQ, and for people who're greater heavily affected, the diagnosis is plenty greater undesirable than for people who're mildly affected. although, those persons will ALLWAYS conflict. i be conscious of all too nicely by using fact I also have a diagnosis of PFAS, or partial fetal alcohol syndrome and inspite of my IQ of 129, I DO conflict. do not drink alcohol on a similar time as pregnant! that is stupid and ignorant aswell as selfish. think of of your infant. Please, supply them the suitable shot at life and abstain from alcohol thoroughly. not even slightly of alcohol for the period of being pregnant is risk-free.

2016-10-17 11:26:41 · answer #7 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

...alcohol is a "solvent"... it dissolves "things" (like brain cells, connective tissue, etc. etc.) when the "blood" is being polluted with alcohol the body's receptors are being "dissolved" and killed... the entire process is long and involved... but... it will eventually kill you... kinda-sorta like committing suicide on the "installment plan"....

2007-09-01 20:50:24 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

i've never heard of chronic or acute problems associated with drinking. but your liver will suffer greatly.

2007-09-01 20:48:47 · answer #9 · answered by Corey the Cosmonaut 6 · 0 1

it ruins your liver is all i know

2007-09-02 05:42:12 · answer #10 · answered by Iylla Rae 3 · 2 0

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