Alcohol can cause blood vessels to dilate, or widen, which can lead to a drop in blood pressure. This can affect circulation and increase the risk of heart problems.
It is the same as smokes. They want to make you take it over and over again.
Alcohol acts as a vasodilator, increasing the diameter of blood vessels.
Long term alcohol use causes the blood vessels to become more fragile and prone to rupture. Alcoholics have a much higher risk of stroke, aneurysms esophageal varicies and bleeding disorders.
Alcohol can irritate the lining of the nose, leading to inflammation and congestion. It can also dilate blood vessels in the nose, causing a runny or stuffy nose.
Alcohol consumption can worsen a stuffy nose by causing blood vessels to dilate, leading to increased nasal congestion and inflammation.
Well, it does not tell how. But it affects the walls of your blood vessels
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.
Alcohol consumption can worsen nasal congestion by causing blood vessels in the nasal passages to swell, leading to increased congestion and difficulty breathing through the nose.
Dialated Blood Vessels
Alcohol reduces the risk that your arteries will harden and that they will become clogged with plaque.
Shock or other trauma can reduce the absorption of alcohol into the blood.
yes