10 - 20 minutes.
yes
The amount of alcohol that has been consumed and the time elapsed since the last alcohol consumption.
Mood can indirectly affect a person's blood alcohol concentration (BAC) through influencing how much they drink or accelerating the effects of alcohol due to stress or depressive states. However, mood itself does not directly impact the way the body metabolizes or absorbs alcohol.
increases
Yes and no. Alcohol can destroy the liver if too much alcohol is consumed. However, an individual does not consume alcohol for a long period of time, the liver can heal itself.
Some of the things that affects the rate the alcohol reaches the blood stream are your weight, gender, size of the drink, time spent drinking, and food.
Such factors include the quantity of alcohol consumed; the time period of such consumption; the contents of the stomach; the drinker's size, weight, and proportion of body fat; gender; alcohol expectancies; and degree of any tolerance built up by past drinking experience.
No. It simply makes the person more alert but only time can reduce the effects of alcohol on the body. Simple solution: dont get drunk.
Tru
No. Alcohol does not care the method by which it is imbibed. It is not concentrated by drinking through straws. Assuming the same amount of alcohol is imbibed in the same amount of time through a straw as through regular drinking methods, the alcohol will not affect you differently in any way. Any difference in experience or in the degree to which one is drunk is purely psychological.
A warm soapy shower will clean this from you. If you have no shower available then the alcohol will evaporate. If you mean internally, then time...the liver needs time to remove alcohol. No amount of coffee or water will actually sober you up faster. Sleep it off and try to remember not to over drink the next time.
Alcohol is a depressant, which means that it slows bodily functioning and reactions time.
It will typically take between 4 and 24 hours for 1.5 ounces of alcohol to get out of your system. The actual amount of time depends on body chemistry and the metabolism.