of course. anyone can
A blackout can occur after abusing alcohol.
An alchoholic blackout is when, after drinking alcohol, your drinking you don't remember some or all of what occurred when you were intoxicated.There are two forms of alcohol blackout. In one (en bloc) blackout, the person experiences amnesia covering the entire period of intoxication whereas in fragmentary blackout the person experiences partial amnesia of that period. The latter are more common than the former.It is important that blackouts not be confused with being passed out or being unconscious. When people are passed out, they are not conscious of what is going on during that period of time. On the other hand, people who suffer a blackout are experiencing amnesia; they were conscious and aware of what was going on while intoxicated but now they can't remember what happened.
because liquer has more pure liquer in it beer is water and liquer
A blackout is forgetting things you did or said while you were conscious and functioning. They are not the same thing as passing out. They are alcohol-induced amnesia, and are a sure sign of developing alcoholism.
When the body has too much alcohol in it's system it tries to get ride of it. First you'll probably vomit whatever alcohol you have in your stomache to reduce the level of alcohol going into the bloodstream. The last resort if passing out. When the levels of alcohol in your body because so high, your brain tells the body to somewhat go unconscious so that you can't drink any more alcohol.
how to stop them from drinking alcohol
Alchohol can cause blackouts and dizzyness:)
I have a test tomorrow and in reviewing my notes it looks like it's the Cerebellum.CerebellumCoordinates fine muscle movement, balance, and some perception and cognition.How does that sound to you?MichelleOntario Canada
Some people experience blackouts after consuming too much alcohol. There are two forms of alcohol blackout. In en bloc blackout, the person experiences amnesia covering the entire period of intoxication. In fragmentary blackout the person experiences partial amnesia of that period. En bloc blackout is unusual. Blackouts should not be confused with passing out, a phenomenon in which people lose consciousness.
When you say "drinking", it carries the connotation of drinking alcohol, drinking alcohol to excess, and becoming addicted to it.
Actually, no. Women are more quickly affected by alcohol than men, and the progression of their alcoholism tends to be faster. They often reach the blackout stage well before a male would, due to the way they metabolize alcohol -- much less efficiently than males.
When you feel much more than you're going to throw up. You feel far worse than that. Your sight starts to dim rapidly, you start to lose focus on just about everything. Your blood-alcohol level is far too high for your body to safely take.