By interfering with sugar metabolism by affecting the liver and pancreas.
No. Blood alcohol level is a measure of how much alcohol is in solution in the blood. It is possible to affect the rate of absorption, but not the level that is reached.
No. Alcohol can only be broken down to CO2 and water. Where alcohol enters the metabolic pathways it can not be synthesized back to carbohydrate or fat. Alcohol can affect blood sugar level in secondary ways.
No. Corticosteroids can affect your mood, and could combine with alcohol (especially in terms of mood swings), but they will not affect the actual level of alcohol in your blood.
A blood alcohol level as low as 0.1 has been shown to affect divided attention while driving.
No, your mood does not affect your BAC. Your BAC or blood alcohol level is only affected by the amount of alcohol you have consumed.
No, blood alcohol level and breath alcohol level are not the same. Blood alcohol level is a direct measurement of the amount of alcohol in the blood, while breath alcohol level is an indirect measurement based on the amount of alcohol in the breath, which is correlated with blood alcohol level.
Blood Alcohol Content/ Blood Alcohol Level.
Blood alcohol level is the percentage of alcohol in the blood, so technically, no, the B/A level is not affected by volume. Practically, however, Dinking the same amounts, a larger person will have a lower B/A level than a smaller person, due to the difference in amounts of blood in the body.
Drinking to much alcohol or beer can change or affect you blood alcohol level immensely If you blood alcohol level is over .08 it is illegal to drive. Things that affect BAC include the quantity of alcohol consumed, the length of time during which consumption occurs, the contents of the stomach, the gender, the weight, and the ratio of fat to non-fat in the body.
-blood pressure -blood glucose level - level of water (intake of fluids) - salt - alcohol - exercise (sweat) - external temperature
No, but it can sometimes lead to a falsely high BAC reading on an alcohol breath testing machine.
2.8 blood alcohol level in a female