Alcohol
Alcohol
EXCERPT ONE: EARLY HISTORY OF ALCOHOL
Alcohol, also known as ethyl alcohol or simply ethanol, is the consumable alcohol. There have been instances and often, fatal anaphylaxis in people wittingly or accidentally ingesting benzene alcohol, the toxic chemical used in pharmaceutical products like antiseptics, mouthwash and nail polish. Ingestable alcohol is readily available in wine, beer, distilled spirits, and other alcoholic beverages. Ethanol is usually brewed from fruits, wine; and from grain, the common beer through fermentation method. Fermentation, which used to yield limited concentration of alcohol, has been substituted with the more efficient and commercial method, distillation:
EXCERPT TWO:
‘Through the process of fermentation, yeast cells act on the sugar content of fruits and grains to produce alcohol and carbon dioxide. Until about 500 years ago, two main beverages were made with alcohol: wine (from fruit sources) and beer (from grains). Fermentation alone could not yield stronger concentrations of alcoholic beverages (Hahn etal, 1998). Alcoholic beverages have been available in the United States since the earliest days of colonialism. However, it was not until the early 1800s that a movement to restrict alcohol consumption began to reach organized levels’ (Hahn etal, 1998).
Alcoholic consumptions have been associated with various myths and orgies, including violence, ecstasies and various illicit activities, which attracted the attention of the temperance movement, which advocated for caution in alcoholic use. Later, the United States government intervened with the Prohibition Act, making the manufacture and distribution of alcohol illegal.
Psychological and Physiological Effects of Alcohol
Alcohol is one of the highly abused drugs that act on the central nervous system. It can produce both stimulating (stimulants, uppers, inducers or mood elevators) and depressing (depressants, calmer, or downers) effects in the body and brain, depending on the amount consumed.
When consumed mildly, alcohol has stimulating effect and depressing effect when consumed in large quantity. Alcohol metabolism takes place in the liver, with the help of the two enzymes: alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) and acetaldehyde dehydrogenase (ACDH). The process is known as alcohol oxidation. This makes the liver the most brunt bearing, vulnerable and susceptible to the effects of alcohol in the body.
Psychological dependence and physical dependence can degenerate gradually into chronic alcoholics or problem drinkers. Psychological dependence sets in when the drinker becomes preoccupied with the thought of obtaining the next drink. Mood swing becomes dependent on experiencing the pleasure associated with using alcohol. Thus, craving can also be associated with psychological dependence. Physiological dependence is craving associated with withdrawal symptoms like psychosomatic pains, i.e., the need to fill the system with alcohol to avoid or alleviate the undesirable effects of abstinence, and consequently addiction or compulsive desire is established:
‘Today’s most widely accepted definition of addiction- used in psychiatry’s latest edition of its diagnostic manual, the DSM-IV-TR recognizes that compulsive use of a substance despite negative consequences is key (Szalavitz, 2007).
Social, Economic, and Health Implications of Alcohol
As mentioned earlier, alcohol acts on the central nervous system. This area of our body controls our thinking and sense of judgment. For these reasons, pronounced alcohol effects impair our sense of reasoning and shadows our perception. Example is in drunk driving, technically known as DUI, for short. It’s illegal to drive or operate dangerous machinery under the influence of drugs like alcohol. The California Highway Patrol (CHP) officers use breathalyzer to determine the blood alcohol concentration of traffic offenders.
The legal safe limit is 0.08%. Violators or offenders end up with fines or other penalties appropriate for the offense. Legally, there’s adult suffrage when it comes to alcohol use in the US. It’s illegal to distribute alcohol to minors or the underage in American Society.
However, some teens purchase alcohol in disguise as adults or with counterfeit identification. Some college students engage in the dangerous practice of taking too many drinks at a time. This is known as binge drinking. Campus bingeing has been a source of concern to parents and school authorities. Crime, violence and other social menace can result as the culmination of chronic alcohol use. Economically, poverty in the form of wasted resources is often nostalgic with alcoholism. School truancy and alcohol related dropouts.
The economic toll of alcohol is apparently noticeable in our emergency rooms, alcoholism, alcohol dependence--- detoxification, rehabilitation and management, e.g., the supply of Antabuse and other health maintenance expenditures.
Some alcohol staunch adherents readily taunt the health benefits of alcohol with reference to French red wine. Some amateur drinkers know when to stop, while some end up as alcoholics or problem drinkers. For some people, metabolizing alcohol is easy, while it’s demanding for some people.
According to research, men tolerate alcohol better than women because of difference in body mass. The liver disease, cirrhosis is often prevalent in problem drinkers. Psychological dependence and physical dependence can also occur in chronic alcohol users. Psychological dependence sets in when the user becomes preoccupied with the thought of obtaining and using alcohol.
His mood becomes dependent on experiencing the pleasure associated with using alcohol. Thus, craving also, can occur in psychological dependence. Physiological dependence is craving associated with withdrawal symptoms like physical or psychosomatic pains. Alcohol contains empty calories, hence, the chance of malnutrition and fluctuating weight in chronic users. Memory loss can also occur in heavy drinkers. Vomiting, dehydration, and vitamin deficiency can also result in alcohol use. Fetal alcohol syndrome or FAS, is also an alcohol-induced disease.
EXCERPT THREE
Alcohol, also known as ethyl alcohol or simply ethanol, is the consumable alcohol. There have been many instances and often, of fatal anaphylactic consequence of people wittingly or accidentally ingesting other varieties of toxic alcohol of benzene derivatives such as Benzyl Alcohol or Benz methanol. Another form of alcohol of pharmaceutical importance is isopropyl alcohol, which is used as antiseptic. Alcohol is also used in mouthwash. The volume of alcohol in any given alcoholic drink can be determined from the proof. Similarly, the proof can be calculated from the volume of alcohol. Example, 40% alcohol amounts to proof of 80, i.e., proof is twice the volume of alcohol or two times (40%x 2) = 80. The more the percentage of alcohol in a given alcoholic drink the stronger the alcohol. Alcohol is one of the highly abused drugs that act on the central nervous system (CNS). It can produce both stimulating (stimulant, uppers, inducers or mood elevators) and depressing (depressant, calmer, or downers) effects in the body and brain, depending on the quantity consumed. When consumed mildly, alcohol has stimulating effect and depressing effect when in large quantity.
Alcohol metabolism can be tasking to the liver, the center of alcohol breakdown in the body. Following ingestion, alcohol catabolism _ a process also known as oxidation is initiated by the enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) which breaks down alcohol to acetaldehyde, a highly toxic and carcinogenic chemical; and here, emerges the danger of alcohol to the liver, which breaks it down and the danger to the whole body in general. Further, the enzyme acetaldehyde dehydrogenase (ACDH) breaks down acetadehyde to acetate and the process is completed with the breakdown of acetate to water and carbon dioxide in the mitochondria, the form in which alcohol is eliminated from the body.
Binge drinking is the practice of taking too many drinks at a time, usually, to the point of intoxication. Intoxication can lead to other high-risk behaviors such as driving under the influence or DUI for short. The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism describes alcohol intake thus: ‘most adults can drink moderate amounts of alcohol – up to two drinks per day for men and one drink per day for women and older people – and avoid alcohol related problems. (One drink equals one 12-ounce bottle of beer or wine cooler, one 5-ounce glass of wine, or 1.5 ounces of 80-proof distilled spirits.), (Medical Review Board, 2007).’ However, problems set in when people develop tolerance; tolerance is when the brain adjusts to the continuous effects of alcohol that more amounts are needed to deliver the same effects of pleasure. And this can consequently lead to alcohol dependence, which has two clinically identified categories by symptoms as described below:
Considering the above exploration and metabolism of alcohol and how easy it is to become an alcoholic or problem drinker, the minimum drinking age limit shouldn’t be lowered to prevent alcohol-related health risks. Besides, alcohol can serve as a steppingstone or gateway to other drug use if the minimum legal drinking age is lowered. Studies have shown that those who drink are likely to smoke, ‘Extensive research supports the popular observation that “smokers drink and drinkers smoke”. Moreover, the heaviest alcohol consumers are also the heaviest consumers of tobacco’, (Medical Review Board, 2007). Also, ‘the “gateway” theory of drug use holds that exposure to “entry” drugs _ notably alcohol, cigarettes, and marijuana _ reliably predicts deeper and more severe drug involvements,’ (Brodsky & Stanton, 2004). It could be recalled that those who abuse alcohol are likely to engage in other high-risk drug abuse like free-basing, the act of inhaling cocaine vapor (cocaine dissolved in ether _ alcohol):
Alcohol can mask tooth related diseases like halitosis, plaque and other dental carriers we can otherwise naturally detect thereby, making early intervention impossible. Hence, tooth loss is prevalent among alcoholics. Alcohol is a recreational drug that has no known dosage. It has neither known LD50 nor LC50; the LD50 is the amount that can prove fatal to 50% of people who consume it and LC50 is the concentration that can prove fatal to 50% of people who consume it. Hence, the minimum legal drinking age shouldn’t be lowered.
Alcohol acts on the central nervous system (CNS), the part of the brain that controls sense of judgment thereby altering sense of judgment and careful reasoning. Researchers are able to reach this conclusive finding: ‘they found that adolescents undergo dramatic changes in the frontal lobe, or prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain critical to judgment, reason, self-control and planning’ ( Cabrera., Spring 2010). Considering this critical stage that has enormous impact on the future life of youth, they should not be exposed to intoxicants that can alter sense of judgment by lowering the minimum legal drinking age.
References
Brodsky, A. & Stanton, P. (2004). “Gateway to Nowhere: How Alcohol Came to be Scapegoated for Drug Abuse.” In InCiardi and McElrath (Eds.). The American Drug Scene: An Anthology (4th ed.). Los Angeles, CA: Roxbury Publishing Company.
Cabrera, A. (2010). Critical Writing. San Francisco State University (Spring 2010). www.copyedge.com
Hahn, D.B., Hahn, E.J., Payne, W.A., & Pinger, R.R. (1998). Drugs: Issues For Today. www.mhhe.com
Medical Review Board (2007). Medical Review Board About.com Health, Disease and Condition: Alcoholism & Substance Abuse. http://alcoholism.about.com/cs/about/faq
Szalavitz, M. (2007). So, What Made Me an Addict?
Washington Post. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp