Most of us enjoy an alcoholic drink from time to time. Drinking alcohol makes us feel comfortable and can create a cozy atmosphere. Unfortunately, excessive alcohol consumption and aging aging are not a good mix and the harmful effects of alcohol become increasingly visible as we age. In any case, if you're serious about aging radiantly, it's important to understand what drinking alcohol does to your body and how it speeds up the aging process. Many people know that excessive drinking causes liver damage, for example, but not that drinking alcohol also causes a whole range of other health problems. In the following blogs, I will explain some of these problems so that you can deal with alcohol in a healthy way.
When do we talk about the use of dangerous alcohol? The limit is lower than you think. In women, consuming more than 6 units of alcohol per week already increases the risk of alcohol dementia. Excessive alcohol consumption (then 28 units per week over a period of 5 years) places women in a very high risk category for developing alcohol dementia.
It's not just total alcohol consumption that counts, but how people drink. A recent Finnish study shows that so-called binge drinking (large amounts of alcohol in one sitting, for example a whole bottle of wine once a month in one evening) already doubles the risk of developing alcohol dementia.
It is not intended to appear polite or puritanical. For many people, drinking alcohol, a beer on a summer day, or a good glass of wine is a pleasant and enjoyable activity. There is nothing wrong with that. However, it is important to know the dangers so that you can make a good assessment of your own alcohol consumption for yourself. In principle, drinking alcohol fits perfectly into a healthy lifestyle. There are also studies that show that drinking a glass of red wine a day actually has a positive effect on health. Drink and live wisely and the harmful effects of alcohol on the body are neutralized. It's a matter of finding the right balance... Part 2
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