Alcohol on the internal organs.
It works on the stomach.
The action of alcohol on the stomach is so high that it is unable to produce a natural digestive fluid in sufficient quantity and fails to absorb foods that can digest it imperfectly. Alcoholics will always experience a condition characterized by a feeling of nausea, emptiness, prostration, and bloating. As a result, food is hated, and passionately harassed for more drinks. Thus, there is a permanent disorder called indigestion. Catastrophic forms of confirmed indigestion result from this practice.
How the liver is affected.
Organic degradation caused by constant alcohol consumption is often fatal in nature. The organ that often undergoes structural changes in alcohol is the liver. Usually, the liver has the ability to retain active substances in its cellular parts. In case of intoxication by different toxic compounds, we analyze the liver as if it were the central repository of foreign substances. It’s virtually the same with alcohol. The liver of the addict is never free from the effect of alcohol and is often saturated. The exact structure of the liver membrane or bursa is affected, preventing proper dialysis and free secretion. The liver becomes large due to the expansion of its vessels, the additional load of liquid matter, and the thickness of tissues. This is followed by the narrowing of the membrane and the narrowing of the whole organ in its cellular parts. The lower parts of the alcohol then become metabolized due to the obstruction provided by the veins to the returning blood. The structure of the liver can be loaded with fat cells and subjected to what is technically known as "foie gras."
How the kidneys deteriorate.
The kidneys also suffer from excessive alcohol consumption. Kidney receptacles lose flexibility and shrinkage strength. The exact structures in them go through a greasy fit. Blood albums go easily through their membranes. As a result, the body loses its strength as if it were gradually running out of blood.
Congestion of the lungs.
Alcohol easily relaxes the pulmonary vessels, as they are more sensitive to fluctuations in heat and cold. Exposed to the effects of rapid changes in atmospheric temperature, they are easily congested. During severe winter seasons, sudden pulmonary congestion easily affects an alcoholic.
Alcohol weakens the heart.
Alcohol consumption significantly affects the heart. The quality of the membrane structures covering and lining the heart changes and thickens to cartilage or cyclic. The valves then lose their flexibility and the so-called turbulence of the valves becomes permanent. The structure of large blood vessels from the heart undergoes the same structural changes so that the vessel loses its flexibility and ability to feed the heart from its post-cardiac bloating with its blood-filled stroke.
Once again, the muscle structure of the heart is not found guilty of degenerative changes in its tissues. Muscle fiber elements are replaced by fat cells or, if not replaced, are themselves transferred to modified muscle tissues in which the shrinkage force is significantly reduced.
Those who suffer from this organic degradation of the central organ and the governor of the blood cycle learn the truth maliciously, and barely break them until the evil progresses away. They are aware of a central power failure due to minor causes such as exhaustion, disorder, broken comfort, or long abstinence. They smell what they call "drowning" but know that wine or other steroids will relieve the sensation immediately. Thus, they seek to relieve them until they finally detect the failure of treatment. Heartfelt exhausted, exhausted, will no longer endure. He took his course and directed his blood flow. The current flows either into the tissue leading to progressive blocking cycles or under a few minor shocks or the excessive movement stop completely in the center.
