Yes, a person with Hemophilia can drink alcohol, however drinking in excess is not good for anyone. Alcohol itself does not interact with the actual medications taken (Clotting Factor Proteins) for hemophilia. Since alcohol can thin a person's blood, alcohol consumption can make a current bleeding issue worse. If there is no active bleed, alcohol should make little to no difference in that end of the hemophiliac's medical spectrum.
Other complications often found in some older hemophiliacs may include liver disease at which point alcohol definitely creates a larger problem and can speed up liver damage but this is not due to hemophilia itself.
In short, Alcohol in excess is not good for anyone, but hemophiliacs can drink alcohol if they are conscious of their own situation and are responsible about it.
bunches go down
Drinking beer through a straw can alter the taste and experience compared to drinking it straight from the bottle or glass. Using a straw may change the way the beer is aerated and can affect the temperature and carbonation levels, potentially impacting the overall flavor and enjoyment of the beer.
Playing baseball affects the enviorment by drinking a beer.
Yes
yes
The CEO of the Meister Beer Drinking Club is Gleason Farris.
he is drinking beer = él toma una cerveza
Beer has no affect on pimples. Drinking too much alcohol can cause dehydration which can cause damage to the skin, making it more susceptible to blemishes.
Yes, it does because alcohol is alcohol anyway you put it.
The addition of vodka in beer can increase the alcohol content and change the flavor profile by adding a stronger, more intense taste. This can alter the overall drinking experience by making the beer more potent and potentially masking some of the original beer flavors.
Depends on your size and your tolerance to alcohol. It may make you a tad slower.
A drinking vessel for beer. It's a mug.