English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

5 answers

There could be many other reasons for this - this is just my own take on your problem, as outlined: (oh - and I'm not a Doctor or anything)

I assume you are talking about drinking alcohol. Drinking has the side effect of causing the blood to become less efficient at transporting oxygen around the body (it also becomes slightly thicker). As your brain detects the fact that it's receiving less oxygen (the brain uses at least 25 percent of all the air your breathe) - it ups the heart rate. An increased heart rate combined with thicker blood could give cause for concern.

As has been stated - either don't drink, drink your booze in a more leisurely manner (it's not a race) or switch to drinking non-alcoholic drinks.

The advice offered here is just speculation - I'm really just guessing. Having said that, you do have a patient's right to access the correct information - you should ask the hospital for more info and why they didn't tell you this in the first place.

2007-10-07 05:10:14 · answer #1 · answered by cornflake#1 7 · 0 0

If you know that drinking causes your pulse to go up, why would you drink? This is putting yourself in danger. You could just drink poison!

2007-10-07 09:15:38 · answer #2 · answered by rjm 4 · 1 1

If you do have to drink, don't take anything strong. Your health goes first, than binging. At least you know you never gonna be an alcoholic. Good luck

2007-10-07 09:24:13 · answer #3 · answered by Teri 3 · 1 1

ARE YOU SERIOUS?

ARE YOU SERIOUS?

ARE YOU SERIOUS?

Now that you might be perturbed take your pulse.

If it is normal then it has to be the Drinks.

Your figure it out from here.

2007-10-09 17:49:45 · answer #4 · answered by Heart Attack Jack 4 · 0 0

DON'T DRINK

2007-10-07 09:06:23 · answer #5 · answered by CDRN 6 · 1 1

fedest.com, questions and answers