Pyloris and Alcohol
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Recent alcoholism research studies demonstrate that there is a relationship between the pyloris and alcohol and the
compulsion to drink.
Pyloris and Alcohol and Compulsive Drinking
Recent research into alcoholism has uncovered the chemical salt that is perhaps the primary factor that triggers the compulsion to drink alcohol. This chemical salt is known as Tetrahydro-isoquiniline (THIQ).
The
more quickly a person drinks, the more time it takes for the body to dispel the alcohol, and the greater the alcohol affects the person.
It takes longer for the body to dispel the alcohol because quickly ingesting concentrated amounts of alcohol results in gastric movement which
causes the pyloris (the muscular valve between the stomach and the small intestine) to spasm, frequently resulting in vomiting and preventing the
break-down of the alcohol by the liver.
Alcohol is usually broken down by the enzymes in the liver into acetaldehyde, and then into acetate, which, in turn, is broken down into
carbon dioxide (eliminated when a person exhales) and water (which is expelled as urine by the bladder).
Heavy amounts of alcohol are transferred throughout the body by the blood. If the alcohol elimination system is greatly overloaded,
it cannot break down the alcohol correctly and THIQ forms in the liquid that surrounds the cells in the blood.
Interestingly, THIQ is a salt that needs acetaldehyde much like table salt needs water. What this means is that the THIQ craves
acetaldehyde, which does not get broken down into acetate and then expelled as carbon dioxide (through the breath) and water (via the
urine). This process then triggers the body's need for more alcohol to feed acetaldehyde to the THIQ.
The more acetaldehyde that the THIQ receives, the more it grows. The more the THIQ grows, the greater the demand for
acetaldehyde. The result is the compulsion to drink that is characteristic of alcoholics.
Pyloris and Alcohol, Hydrochloric Acid, and Stomach Ulcers
When food enters the stomach, the stomach contracts and mixes the food to facilitate digestion.
Under normal conditions, the food then passes from the stomach into the small intestine. At the end of the stomach leading into the small
intestine is the pylorus.
The cells of the stomach lining produce a complex called mucopolysaccharide (CMPS) that protects the surface of the stomach from hydrochloric
acid. Hydrochloric acid is manufactured by the Chief cells in the stomach lining and helps digest the food.
Ulcers result from the wearing away of the stomach lining due to the breakdown of the CMPS and eventual growth and spreading by Helicobacter
pyloris, a spiral-shaped bacterium. Helicobacter pyloris resists being covered over by the CMPS, thus allowing the hydrochloric acid
to erode the stomach surface.
| Heavy drinking can increase the risk for certain cancers, especially those of the throat, voice box (larynx),
liver, and esophagus. Excessive drinking can also cause immune system problems, brain damage, harm to the fetus during pregnancy,
and cirrhosis of the liver. |
The relationship between alcohol, ulcers, and the Helicobacter pyloris bacteria is this: Excessive drinking of concentrated alcohol
helps wear away the complex CMPS that covers the stomach lining. Once this lining is unprotected, the Helicobacter pyloris bacteria can
start forming and spreading, leading to an ulcer.
| In the United States, roughly 50,000 cases of alcohol poisoning are reported each year, and approximately once
every week, someone dies from this preventable condition. |
It is worth mentioning that there are two forms of stomach cancer that are also attributed to Helicobacter pyloris infection. Thus,
excessive drinking seems to play an important part in the development of both stomach ulcers AND stomach cancer.
Pyloris and Alcohol: Conclusion
The above discussion analysis reveals two separate issues regarding the relationship between pyloris and alcohol. Both
of these issues, unfortunately, may be interrelated. More to the point, the more a person feels the need to drink increasing amounts of
alcohol, the more likely he or she will develop ulcers or stomach cancer or both.
| Women are more likely to die of cirrhosis of the liver and violence caused by alcohol abuse and die 11 years
earlier than their male counterparts. |
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| If drinking alcohol is going to affect your ability to have children, not to mention the negative health
consequences that alcohol presents to the woman who will be having the child, why not simply abstain from drinking alcohol while
you are trying to have a child, while the mother is carrying the child, and while the mother is breast feeding the child. |
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