The same as after you eat steak, or chicken, or sushi, or a salad. If you drink enough, you get intoxicated.
Eating after drinking does not speed up the removal of alcohol from your system. While food can slow the absorption of alcohol into the bloodstream, the liver metabolizes alcohol at a constant rate, regardless of whether you've eaten or not. Therefore, eating may help mitigate the effects of alcohol but won't hasten its elimination.
There are no effects on the liver unless a person abuses alcohol over a period of many years or decades. However, alcohol abuse can lead to cirrhosis, or permanent scarring of the liver, and many other dangerous diseases.
There are many different things that can happen to a human body when alcohol is consumed. Damage to the liver, damage to the brain, vomiting, and passing out are all effects of alcohol.
Alcohol cirrhosis of the liver is scarring caused by decades of very heavy drinking.
To protect your liver from the harmful effects of alcohol consumption, you can limit your alcohol intake, drink plenty of water, eat a healthy diet, exercise regularly, and avoid binge drinking. It is also important to avoid mixing alcohol with medications that can harm your liver. Regularly monitoring your liver health through check-ups with a healthcare provider is also recommended.
Excessive drinking can result in alcohol poisoning and liver failure.
Drinking alcohol while taking creatine can potentially lead to dehydration, liver damage, and impaired muscle recovery. It may also increase the risk of negative side effects and reduce the effectiveness of both substances.
no
It takes many years of heavy drinking to be a cause of liver damage. On the other hand, drinking in moderation benefits the liver.
Of course! Alcohol is metabolized by the liver, and will affect liver function tests.
No. Isopropyl alcohol does not affect the liver in the same way as ethyl alcohol. Furthermore, the effects on the liver come from the functioning of a living liver (!) dealing with alcohol for long periods of time. The conditions possible in an experiment would have no valid relationship to the actual course of alcoholic liver disease.
If you are a chronic Suboxone user, there will be little to no side effects if you drink alcohol, except you might get sleepier than you normally would. After I quit heroin and started taking Suboxone, I became a raging alcoholic. I was drinking a liter of vodka a day, on top of my Suboxone. However, Suboxone is bad for your liver, and so is alcohol, so drinking while you're on Suboxone is very hard on your liver.