The lungs, kidneys, and perspiration account for approximately 10% of the elimination of alcohol from the body. The majority of alcohol is metabolized by the liver, which processes about 90% of it. The exact percentages can vary based on factors such as individual metabolism and overall health.
The lungs, kidneys, and perspiration together account for approximately 10% of the elimination of alcohol from the body. The majority of alcohol is metabolized by the liver, which processes about 90% of consumed alcohol. The lungs expel alcohol through breath, while the kidneys and sweat glands also play minor roles in excretion. Thus, while these organs contribute to alcohol elimination, the liver remains the primary site of metabolism.
The lungs, kidneys, and perspiration collectively account for approximately 10% of the elimination of alcohol from the body. The majority of alcohol metabolism occurs in the liver, where enzymes break it down. The remaining 90% is primarily processed through hepatic metabolism. Factors such as individual metabolism rates can influence the exact percentages.
Approximately 5-10% of alcohol is eliminated from the body through the lungs and kidneys. The majority, around 90-95%, is metabolized by the liver. In the lungs, alcohol is expelled through exhalation, while the kidneys filter it out through urine. This contributes to the overall elimination of alcohol from the body but is a relatively small percentage compared to hepatic metabolism.
No, skin is not the primary organ of elimination. The primary organs responsible for elimination in the body are the kidneys, which filter waste from the blood and excrete it as urine. The liver also plays a crucial role in detoxifying substances and producing bile for the elimination of certain wastes. While the skin can excrete some waste products through sweat, its role in elimination is secondary compared to the kidneys and liver.
starting with the mouth, then the esophagus, then stomach, the liver, gallbladder, pancreas, small intestines, large intestines, the lungs, the kidneys, and the skin.
The lungs, kidneys, and perspiration together account for approximately 10% of the elimination of alcohol from the body. The majority of alcohol is metabolized by the liver, which processes about 90% of consumed alcohol. The lungs expel alcohol through breath, while the kidneys and sweat glands also play minor roles in excretion. Thus, while these organs contribute to alcohol elimination, the liver remains the primary site of metabolism.
Dhdj
Lungs do not remove alcohol from your bloodstream. When you drink alcohol, your lungs exhale about 5% of alcohol which is why any consumption of alcohol can be picked up on breathalyzer tests.
the kidneys (that is if you meant elimination not emlimination)
Elimination is the process by which a drug is excreted from the body through the kidneys.
The kidneys remove nitrogenous waste from the blood and produce urine to remove the waste.
ALCOHOL
ExcretionExcretion
starting with the mouth, then the esophagus, then stomach, the liver, gallbladder, pancreas, small intestines, large intestines, the lungs, the kidneys, and the skin.
Alcohol is primarily metabolized by the liver.
Kidneys. Colon. Skin. Lungs. Liver.
As a gas - blood and the lungs. As an organic compound - it's the kidneys.