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Alcohol and Nutrition Beverages Brain Absorption Liver Liver Deterioration Excretion Metabolism Quiz Malnutrition Nutrition Facts Short-term Effects Long-term Effects University Use
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Alcohol in Beverages Each of these servings equals one drink
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Alcohol in the Stomach 20% absorbed immediately in empty stomach Food slows absorption Enzyme: Alcohol Dehydrogenase- decreases amount of alcohol entering the blood by 20%
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Alcohol in the Liver Processes one drink per hour or ½ oz. of ethanol Alcohol makes the biggest impact on the liver
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NAD + NADH + H + NAD + NADH + H + Alcohol (ethanol) Alcohol dehydrogenase Acetaldehyde dehydrogenase Acetaldehyde Acetate Acetyl CoA CoA Alcohol Metabolism High concentration of acetaldehyde to brain and other tissues are responsible for many of the damaging effects
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Liver Deterioration 1.Fatty Liver –Accumulation of fat 2.Fibrosis –Cells: lose their function characteristics of connective tissue cells 3.Cirrhosis –Cells: die permanently lose their function Cirrhosis
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Excretion of Alcohol Alcohol is not digested nor chemically changed in the blood stream Amount of alcohol in breath and urine proportional to amount still in bloodstream
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Alcohol’s Effects on the Brain 0.05- Impaired judgment, relaxed inhibitions, altered heart rate 0.10- Impaired coordination, delayed reaction time, exaggerated emotions, impaired peripheral vision, impaired ability to operate a vehicle 0.15- Slurred speech, blurred vision, staggered walk, seriously impaired coordination and judgment 0.20- Double vision, inability to walk 0.30- Uninhibited behavior, confusion, inability to comprehend 0.40 to 0.60- Unconsciousness, shock, coma, death (cardiac or respiratory failure)
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Nutrition Facts Contributes to fat storage in central region aka “Beer Belly” 7 kcal/gram Recommendation: Not more than two drinks/day for average-size man; one drink/day for average-size woman
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Alcohol & Malnutrition Primary Malnutrition- alcohol displaces food Secondary Malnutrition-alcohol interferes with digestion and absorption of nutrients Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome- Thiamin deficiency
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Alcohol’s Short-Term Effects Binge Drinking (4+ or 5+ drinks) –Alcohol Poisoning Alcohol consumption: –Suicide (33%) –Homicide (50%) –Accidents (50%) DE (2002)DE (2007) -> 51 fatalities19 fatalities –Violence (Robbery, rape, assault) –Victim of crime –Injury (falls, drownings, fire)
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Alcohol’s Long-Term Effects Fetal Alcohol Syndrome Liver Disease Kidney Disease Heart Disease Cancer
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University Use Students drink 4 billion cans of beer yearly 360,000 of 12 million undergraduates will die from alcohol-related causes while in school Nearly ½ of college students are binge drinkers Average student spends $900 per year on alcohol (books $450/year)
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1.What is considered one drink? A.10 oz. beer B. 6 oz. glass of wine C. 1 ½ oz. hard liquor D. 8 oz. wine cooler 2.What is Delaware’s Blood Alcohol Concentration Limit? A..20 B..05 C..10 D..08 3. What is the approximate BAC when a person has slurred speech, staggered walk & blurred vision? A..30 B..15 C..10 D..05 Answers: 1. C 2. D 3. B Quiz
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