You made be referring to the liver, which metabolizes or breaks down alcohol.
Sugar
Oxygen
The sugar created during the fermentation process that produces alcohol is called glucose. Yeast consumes the glucose in the presence of water to produce ethanol (alcohol) and carbon dioxide.
Alcohol fermentation takes place in the fermentation tanks during the process of making alcoholic beverages.
Carbon dioxide is produced as a waste product of cellular respiration in the mitochondria of cells. During this process, glucose and oxygen are broken down to release energy, with carbon dioxide being one of the byproducts that is eventually transported in the bloodstream to the lungs for elimination from the body through exhalation.
The process that produces ethanol is alcoholic fermentation. The process that produces lactic acid is lactic acid fermentation.
Sourdough smells like alcohol because during the fermentation process, yeast in the sourdough starter produces alcohol as a byproduct.
The process that exchanges O2 and CO2 is called respiration. In animals, oxygen is inhaled into the lungs, where it diffuses into the bloodstream and is transported to cells for cellular respiration, producing energy. During this process, carbon dioxide, a waste product, is produced and transported back to the lungs, where it is exhaled. In plants, a similar exchange occurs during photosynthesis, where CO2 is taken in and O2 is released.
The waste products of alcohol fermentation are ethanol (alcohol) and carbon dioxide. This process occurs in yeast cells during anaerobic conditions, such as in brewing and winemaking.
Do a E1 elimination reaction (using a weak base, such as a hot alcohol). The initial primary cation formed is unstable, and a methyl shift will result in a more stable secondary cation. Elimination of the tertiary proton will give you 2-methyl-2-butene as the major product (zaitsev's rule - it is the more substituted product). Elimination of the primary proton will also get you some amount of 3-methyl-1-butene (the hoffman product).
It was transported by pigeons!
Yes, a patient with a ventriculostomy can be transported. However, specific considerations need to be taken to ensure the ventriculostomy system is managed carefully to prevent complications during transport. Close monitoring and coordination with healthcare professionals are essential during the transport process.