Thursday, May 30, 2013

Alcohol: How Much is too Much

Alcohol

How much alcohol qualifies as too much? Many Americans ask themselves this question every day due to concerns over their health, their behavior, or the legal repercussions of public intoxication and driving under the influence. Individuals who find their lives unmanageable due to their alcohol consumption often choose to give it up altogether. Others try to figure out whether they have in fact exceeded a reasonable threshold in an effort to cut down on their drinking.

Accepted Limits vs. "Heavy" Drinking

Medical science has tried to make the issue more straightforward by setting some general rules, establishing two drinks per day, or 14 drinks per week, as an acceptable amount for adult males and one drink as day, or 7 drinks per week, as acceptable for adult females. 4 or more drinks per day for men, and 3 or more drinks for women, enters the "heavy drinking" range. Binge drinking on a Saturday therefore counts as excessive, even if the drinker has abstained throughout the week, because it violates the daily drink limit.

What Is a Drink, Anyway?

But what constitutes a drink? This question seems simple enough, but variations in portion size and alcohol content can make reliable measurements difficult. Accepted general standards for "a drink" include:
  • 12 ounces of beer
  • 7 to 8 ounces of malt liquor
  • 5 ounces of table wine
  • 3 to 4 ounces of sherry or port
  • 2 to 3 ounces of liqueur or cordial
  • 1.5 ounces of brandy
  • 1.5 ounces of 80-proof spirits 
Even within these reasonably predictable portion sizes, however, actual alcohol content of the substances at hand can vary considerably. A sweet white wine, for example, will typically have a lower alcohol content than a dry red wine, while beer percentages hover up and down from brand to brand. Individuals must view the percentage marked on the container to get an idea of how much alcohol they are consuming.


Health Considerations

Pre-existing health conditions may force some drinkers to call it an evening earlier than others. Impaired organ function, for instance, may reduce alcohol tolerance to the point where one drink causes drunkenness. These individuals can do their health a tremendous favor by swearing off alcohol altogether, despite its association with certain cardiovascular benefits. The combination of prescription drugs with any amount of alcohol can have wildly unpredictable results. For those who take medication on a regular basis, any amount of alcohol may prove excessive or even dangerous.

The Tricky Nature of Blood Alcohol Levels

Drinking's effects also vary by gender. Women tend to show elevated blood alcohol levels more quickly than men, due to their relatively slighter build and higher percentage of body fat. Police use blood alcohol levels to determine whether drivers have operated their vehicles while intoxicated. While the intoxication level can vary from state to state, "legally drunk" generally means a blood alcohol level between .08 percent and .1 percent. Since different people can reach this number after differing degrees of alcohol intake, anyone who drives regularly has an excellent reason to simply give up drinking for good.

Making the Right Choice

Beyond all of these other determining factors, however, drinkers must ask themselves a personal question -- whether their behavior has had a damaging effect on their everyday lives and health. Concern over drinking habits doesn't generally occur in a vacuum; many people begin to question their drinking only after a specific incident brings the subject to the fore. These incidents, however regrettable they may seem at the time, can provide a powerful incentive to change things for the better and embrace rehabilitation or other treatment. In the end, the individual must choose what kind of life he wishes to lead as the ultimate benchmark for the question, "How much is too much?"

Thursday, May 16, 2013

How methamphetamine detox works


Pills
Methamphetamine is a highly addictive drug that stimulates your central nervous system. In 2011, about 5.9 million people over the age of 26, in the US alone, had taken methamphetamine at some point in their life. Meth has gotten a lot of media coverage over the years. It seems we keep hearing about an illegal meth lab that has exploded due to the chemicals used, or seeing the famous Faces of Meth collected and advertised by The Meth Project. But, how does meth create such a terrible change within a person, and what exactly does it do to your body?

Physical and Mental Addiction to Methamphetamine

Most drugs affect the brain in a way that encourages addiction. Some addiction is mostly psychological. Some addiction is mainly physical. Meth addiction is often both psychological and physical. Using methamphetamine floods the brain with the chemical dopamine. This chemical tells your body that it is doing something good – or has accomplished something pleasant. After flooding the brain with this pleasure chemical, it then stops the chemical from absorbing back into the system. When you experience reward or pleasure without a drug, your brain is releasing this chemical, then absorbing it, then releasing it back into the system again as a natural process. But meth stops the absorption process, so the feeling of pleasure is even more intense than you would normally experience naturally. Addicts pursue this intense high. Using the drug over and over again can actually change the structure and function of the brain. The physical effects of meth are extremely negative. Because it is a stimulant, it increases heart rate, breathing rate, and blood pressure which can lead to heart attacks, seizures or strokes. Use of meth can also lead to hyperthermia (abnormally high body temperature). Additionally, the drug itself is so bad for the body that it can cause dental decay and infections in the lining of your lungs, kidney, or liver. Even with these effects, those addicted to the drug will keep taking it because of the intense physical craving they experience for the drug. A person can become addicted to this drug after only one use. How fast they become addicted depends on their emotional state, their genetic structure, and their physical health.

Short and Long-Term Effects of Methamphetamine

Some of the effects of methamphetamine use:
  • Increased heart rate, blood pressure, and body temperature
  • Nausea
  • Appetite reduction or loss
  • Malnutrition and weight loss
  • Depression
  • Insomnia and disturbed sleep patterns
  • Liver, kidney, and lung damage
  • Extreme tooth decay
  • Apathy
  • Brain damage
  • Stroke
  • Epilepsy
  • Short or long term memory loss
  • Violent and bizarre behavior
  • Hallucinations
  • Panic attacks
  • Convulsions and seizures
  • Psychosis
Death After a high is reached when using meth, the user can experience a severe crash or breakdown. Additionally, meth is a stimulant, so while taking it a user can experience insomnia, but the insomnia can actually continue after the crash. Lack of sleep has its own set of side effects and symptoms including extreme irritability, depression, and psychotic episodes.

Medical Methamphetamine Detox

The process of withdrawing from meth can be extremely uncomfortable. The former user becomes depressed, loses energy and loses his or her ability to feel pleasure. Other withdrawal symptoms include anxiety, paranoia, insomnia, and suicidal thoughts. The most effective method of detoxing from meth is to get involved in an inpatient treatment program which features tightly monitored medical detox. This type of detox is designed to make the person withdrawing more comfortable utilizing medication, nutrition, and therapy to help them through the withdrawal process. The end result of a medical detox is a completely drug-free individual. It is also extremely important to continue rehab after detox in order to address the root causes of the addiction using therapy, support groups, and other means.

Sources:

www.DrugAbuse.gov
www.MethProject.org
www.DrugFreeWorld.com