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This is What Excessive Alcohol Does to Your Body!

Owner
Jonathan
Effect on the stomach.

The effect of alcohol on the stomach is extremely harmful. The stomach is unable to produce the natural digestive fluid in desirable amounts and also fails to absorb the food which is eaten. A sense of nausea, emptiness, prostration and distention will be regularly faced by alcoholics. This results in a loss of appetite and is substituted only with a hankering for more alcohol. This leads the human body to become vulnerable to a life threatening disorder called dyspepsia. Grave forms of confirmed indigestion are born out of this practice.

Effect on the liver

The organic deformities caused by the excessive and regular use of alcohol are often fatal in character. The organ which is faced with the most far-reaching changes from alcohol, is undoubtedly the liver. Usually, the liver has the strength to carry active substances in its cellular parts. During instances of poisoning caused by numerous poisonous compounds, we consider the liver as the epicenter of the foreign matter. This is more or less similarly applied to the case of alcohol. The liver of an alcoholic is consistently under the influence of alcohol and it is mostly saturated with the same. The very instance at which the membranous structure of the liver gets affected, this results in stopping it from proper dialysis and free secretion. The liver becomes inflated and disfunctional due to the dilatation of its vessels and the broadening of tissue. This follows deflation of membrane and shrinks the whole of the liver in its cellular parts. Then the abdomen of the alcoholic becomes weak owing to the obstruction offered to the traveling blood by the veins. The framework of the liver may be polluted with fatty cells and transform into what is technically called 'fatty liver'.

Effect on the kidneys

The kidneys are one of the biggest sufferers from excessive consumption of alcohol.. The kidney vessels lose elasticity and power of contraction. The tiny structures in them go through fatty structural change. Albumin that is in the blood easily passes through the membranes of the cells. This makes the body gradually lose power as it loses blood at regular intervals.

Effect on the heart

Consumption of alcohol has a very adverse effect on the heart. The composition of the membranous structures which engulf and streamline the heart id considerably changed and thickened and it becomes highly cartilaginous. Then the valves gradually forgo their smooth and soft texture and valvular disorder becomes permanent. The framework of the the way the blood-vessel leadings are coated also changes so that the vessels no longer remain stretchable and their power to feed the heart by the recoil from its distention is greatly impaired. Again, the muscular built of the heart gives up owing to degrading changes in its tissue. The various aspects of the muscular fiber are replaced with fatty cells. If they are replaced, they are transferred into a different muscular texture in which the strength of contraction is greatly impaired.

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