As a blood alcohol concentration (by percentage) anywhere between 0.3-0.45 is considered increasingly lethal (with 0.45 being the lethal dose for most people) and 0.5 and above is certain to end life, a blood alcohol concentration of 2.29 would most likely have to be administered post-mortem as the subject would have been dead long before being capable of consuming enough alcohol to achieve this. Such a blood alcohol concentration is unlikely to be dangerous to the dead.
put this in your own word so you don't get in trouble: ts really dangerous for a pregnant mother to drink alcohol the reason is that the alcohol can get in the baby blood system and do miscarriage, stillbirth, and a range of lifelong physical,
Urm, Definitely. Get yourself checked out. You're diabetic; or whomever you're referring to.
Propargyl alcohol
The amount of alcohol in the blood is called blood alcohol concentration or BAC.
Alcohol is only dangerous if abused.
alchohol can be very dangerous when driving
2.5 grams of alcohol per litre of blood
Blood Alcohol Content/ Blood Alcohol Level.
Blood alcohol concentration (sometimes called blood alcohol content) or BAL is a measure of the proportion of alcohol in a person's blood.
Blood alcohol content. It is used to find out what level of alcohol is in someone's system.
Coumading or warfarin are "blood thinners". you have to be very careful when mixing any sort of alcohol, as Alcohol is a blood thinner. Too much alcohol can essentially increase the risk of bleeding -- including dangerous internal bleeding. Chronic, significant alcohol use, such as with alcoholism, can have the opposite effect, making Coumadin less effective by increasing the risk of blood clots, while at the same time increasing the risk of gastrointestinal bleeding.