alcohol lowers the males sperm count it slow down the amount of sperm being produced. Now if your speaking about yourself if you was ovulating that then the chance of you getting pregnant should be the same as if you was not drinking
Alcohol lowers inhibitions, which can lead to poor judgement and riskier behavior. It also can lead to more of a chance of a sexual accident if sex does occur while under the influence.
They run an extremely good chance of developing drinking problems -- sooner, rather than later. Any child drinking is a drinking problem.
Look up Fetal Alcohol Syndrome.... alcohol can have devastating effects on an unborn child.....don't chance it.
ALCOHOL: Avoid drinking alcohol and taking medications that contain alcohol while taking keroconzole and for at least three days after you finish the medication. Alcohol may cause nausea, abdominal cramps, vomiting, headaches, and flushing the medication out your system without giving it a chance to work properly.
Drinking alcohol
Alcohol increases the chance of seizures, both while you are drinking and especially when you are sobering up. Chronic alcoholics have an especially hard time of it during detox, which is why we recommend a medically-supervised detox from alcohol or tranquilizers (which have much the same effect).
No it probably increases the chance by lowering inhibitions, leading to risky behavior. It also causes birth defects like Fetal Alcohol Syndrome.
As long as you're menstruating, there's a chance of a natural pregnancy. If you're not menstruating, there's no chance of a natural pregnancy.
Don't drink. Common equation is 1 ounce of alcohol an hour. Even this will catch up with you if you do it long enough, but it gives you the chance to stop. Binge drinking or drinking contests are a sure way of over doing it.We can't answer questions from printed/copyrighted materials.
Drinking alcohol. Giving birth should not cause any memory loss, except perhaps due to anesthesia in the very rare event that general anesthesia would be used. Drinking alcohol, in and of itself, does not usually cause memory loss either. However, drinking to excess can result in induced amnesia (blackouts) where a person may not recall things that were done while drinking. Long-term use can cause permanent memory loss as continual exposure to the neurotoxic effects of alcohol gradually erodes the performance of the cells in the brain.
Moderate drinking is associated with better health and greater longevity than is either abstaining from alcohol or abusing it. Chronic, excessive alcohol intake can cause persistent amnesic disorder and dementia. One in 5 heavy drinkers will develop a fatty liver, this can lead to death if they continue drinking. Some alcoholics will get alcoholic hepatitis, an inflamed liver. If a person with alcoholic hepatitis keeps drinking, they have a 40% chance of getting cirrhosis of the liver.
It lowers the chance