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Yes alcohol can cause blackouts,it is more common in heavy or binge drinkers but can even occur in moderate drinkers.
Alcohol can severly effect someone's coordination when taken in large doses. Alcohol will still temporarily effect someone's coordination when taken in smaller doses as well
The question does not make sense. Low doses of alcohol, by definition, are not acute.
There are none. High doses of benadryl induce delirium that may be exacerbated by alcohol, but such doses are usually the result of the user's intent to get a high. Diphenhydramine at it's therapeutic doses does not interact with alcohol in any significant way.
True, It can
not at recommended doses for the prescribed amount of time with cautions about excess alcohol
In the immediate effects, yes - alcohol does induce euphoria, then in larger doses it will cause lethargy (sluggish feeling), and so on.
In the immediate effects, yes - alcohol does induce euphoria, then in larger doses it will cause lethargy (sluggish feeling), and so on.
alcohol has nothing to do with it but using any upper for prolonged periods will cause both visual and auditory hallucination
In small doses, alcohol can increase performance slightly. However, beyond that it begins to have intoxicating effects and these dramatically reduce performance.
In small doses, alcohol can increase performance slightly. However, beyond that it begins to have intoxicating effects and these dramatically reduce performance.
Gamma hydroxy butrate. it is a substance that in high doses can be a date rape drug but at lower and medium doses is similar to alcohol but with more euphoria. It was schedueled in 1999 due to a number of deaths.