That varies greatly depending on how much beer is consumed, what other insults are given to the liver and genetic predisposition. If you drink enough beer for long enough you will almost certainly have liver problems at some point (as well as many other problems).
It usually takes 2-3 decades of heavy drinking to have clinically significant liver problems from drinking alcohol but you can easily see some evidence of liver injury after one binge and rarely the liver can fail after just one binge.
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In order for the liver in the human body to get rid of one alcoholic drink, it takes approximately one hour. This only goes for the liver and its metabolic rate for alcohol.
The liver metabolizes the alcohol in one drink per hour.
Humans do not "burn up" alcohol, they remove it from the blood stream with the liver and kidneys, which is why execesive drinking can cause kidney or liver failure. But, with that said, males do remove alcohol from their system faster than a female. Men at the rate of roughly 1 drink per hour and woman at the rate of half a drink per hour. 1 drink is defined as one 12oz beer, a normal glass of wine, or one shot of liquor.
A healthy functioning liver "processes" alcohol at a rate of 1 unit per hour.
easy don't drink at all or you could drink something undetectable
Alcohol is metabolized by the liver at a rate of one ounce per hour. 1 ounce of alcohol = one standard drink or beer.
The liver metabolizes alcohol so it doesn't stay there long.
About one hour
That depends on the age and gender of the person.
Alcohol is not bad for you IF you drink in moderation - that means one drink, not a whole bottle! When you drink too much of any alcohol, it's bad for you because it poisons the liver and kills off brain cells.
The presence of alcohol in the bloodstream depends on various factors such as the amount consumed, body weight, metabolism rate, and hydration levels. On average, alcohol can be detected in the bloodstream for up to 12 hours after consumption.