I first started drinking alcohol about five years ago. I only drink maybe two nights in one month, mainly on special occasions or just to go and catch up with my friends and have a drink. I have always suffered a typical hangover... headaches, dehydrated etc. But the last few months if I go out and drink alcohol the following night (24 hours later) my body head to toe feels severely bruised and so tender to touch to the point where I can't even move. I have never come across this before so if anyone may be able to reply to this I would be grateful.
Thank you
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Do you have any information on this?
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I can tell you more about this weird feeling and also I can speak about chest pain after drinking alcohol. It becomes something that I am dealing with all the time, so I have decided that it is time for me to stop drinking alcohol. Generally, it is very easy to understand this issue since a alcohol can play a role in interfering with the breakdown of lactic acid and that is why all of this happens. Because, in that case, your muscles to increase in soreness after physical activity. I think that you already do know how alcohol can impact amino acids - it is destroying them and your body needs energy that alcohol destroys. That is why you feel week.
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I have never experienced anything like it before. It started in my chest area then went up into my neck then down into my thighs. Its gone in my neck now but still in my torso and thighs. It's very uncomfortable and it even hurts to wash in the shower. I hope it goes away soon.
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Dear Trixey24
Thanks for your reply.
As you are from mixed decent- Japanese-Hawaiian. It has been found that 50% of the Pacific Rim Asian population (Chinese, Japanese, Koreans) possess an atypical alcohol dehydrogenate (ADH) known as ADH2*2 that leads to rapid conversion of ethanol to acetaldehyde. Since acetaldehyde is more toxic than alcohol, its increased accumulation causes flushing in the human body.
The first step toward metabolizing alcohol is to convert it to acetaldehyde. Approximately half of people of Asian descent are considered to be sensitive to alcohol due to this condition. Flushing, after consuming one or two alcoholic beverages, includes a range of symptoms: dizziness, nausea, headaches, an increased pulse, occasional extreme drowsiness, and occasional skin swelling and itchiness. These unpleasant side effects often prevent further drinking that may lead to further inebriation, but the symptoms can lead to misassumption that the people affected are more easily inebriated than others.
This causes a reaction where the body cannot break down ingested alcohol completely, due to a missense polymorphism that encodes the enzyme, acetaldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH2), normally responsible for breaking down acetaldehyde, a product of the metabolism of alcohol. Flushing, or blushing, is associated with the erythema (reddening caused by dilation of capillaries) of the face, neck, and shoulder, after consumption of alcohol.
. Much anecdotal evidence suggests that consumption of heartburn medicine containing ranitidine or famotidine (such as Zantac® or Pepcid AC®) may be able to reduce the symptoms if taken an hour before drinking.
Hope that helps
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I thought I was the only person who got this everyone thinks I'm mad but it is awful like I'm coming down with flu. I've been worrying that I've got some form of liver damage but my Dr carried out some liver function tests and everything was normal. They did not seem concerned but its really worrying me. I would not class myself as a big drinker but it really puts me off drinking and having a good time with my friends because I know the next couple of days will be unbearable. I would be grateful for any advice or suggestions as to what causes this.
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It does have something to do with your ability to metabolise alcohol as a previous post says. Basically what's happening is that when you drink quite a lot, your body finds it difficult to metabolise the alcohol. In the mean time the alcohol attackes your muscles which is what causes the bruised feeling. Appartently it's more common in young men than in women and of course alcoholics get it too. If you don't drink regularly it's just a temporary thing and if you are young and/or healthy enough your muscles heal after your body metabolises the alcohol. The scary thing about it though is that the alcohol attackes all the muscles in the body including the most important muscle of all, the heart. I now drink a heck of a lot less and try to drink large amounts of water when I do consume alcohol to help my body metabolise it quicker and of course avoid the inevitable dehydration that alcohol consumption causes. It doesn't totally stop the temporary myopathy from occuring but it does make it less severe.
Hope this helps
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i think you are all right as i went out last night and now my body has swelled and feels bruised again. does this mean im halming myself and i shouldnt drink anymore???????, im now quite worried of wot ive read in your posts,
i would be gratefull for any advise
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