google-site-verification: google5fc37f5d2336f691.html google-site-verification=D--UP1WpKinejjwTgUQLu5Ltq5oIbR3X-ydIuP3eLIo Physiological Effects of Chronic Alcohol Consumption on Internal Organs

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Physiological Effects of Chronic Alcohol Consumption on Internal Organs

The Effects of Alcohol on Internal Organs










Introduction:

Alcohol consumption has been known to cause adverse health effects, especially to the organs of the body. This article will discuss the scientific aspects of how alcohol affects the stomach, liver, kidneys, lungs, and heart.


Effects on the Stomach:

The ingestion of alcohol can lead to dangerous effects on the stomach, such as a reduction in the natural digestive fluid production and inadequate food absorption, resulting in dyspepsia. Alcoholic individuals often experience feelings of nausea, prostration, and distention, which leads to a reduced appetite for food and increased cravings for more alcohol. Long-term alcohol use can lead to chronic indigestion.


Effects on the Liver:

The liver is the organ most commonly affected by the continued use of alcohol. Alcohol often saturates the liver, preventing proper dialysis and free secretion. The liver's membranous or capsular structure may be affected, leading to liver enlargement, thickening of tissues, and a surcharge of fluid matter. The liver may also develop fatty liver, where its structure gets charged with fatty cells. This chronic use of alcohol can lead to fatal organic deterioration.


Effects on the Kidneys:

Excessive consumption of alcohol can lead to a loss of elasticity and power of contraction in the kidney vessels. The minute structures in the kidneys undergo fatty modification, leading to the easy passage of albumin from the blood, causing a gradual loss of the body's power.


Effects on the Lungs:

Alcohol has a relaxing effect on the lungs' vessels, making them more susceptible to fluctuations of heat and cold. During winter, alcohol can lead to sudden fatal congestion of the lungs.


Effects on the Heart:

Alcohol greatly affects the heart by changing the quality of the membranous structures that cover and line it. The valves become less supple and may develop valvular disorders. The coats of the great blood-vessels leading from the heart also share the same changes in structure, reducing the vessel's elasticity and power to feed the heart. The muscular structure of the heart may undergo degenerative changes, leading to a reduction in the power of contraction, causing heart failure.


Conclusion:

Long-term alcohol use can lead to fatal organic deterioration of the central and governing organs of the blood circulation system. Alcohol consumption may go unnoticed until the damage is far more advanced, resulting in a central failure of power from slight causes. Individuals with chronic alcohol consumption may experience a sinking feeling, which they seek to relieve with wine or other stimulants, until the remedy no longer works, leading to heart failure.

 

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