History of Alcohol Use
Alcohols and Effects
Metabolism
Organ and Brain Damage
Gender Differences and Neurotransmitters
100

This Ivy League university once operated its own brewery

Harvard University

100

Alcohol that we drink recreationally?

Ethyl Alcohol

100

95% of alcohol is metabolized in this organ

Liver

100

Symptoms of this condition that is associated with drinking too heavily are: unconsciousness, vomiting, slow and irregular breathing, and skin that is cold, clammy, and pale bluish in colour

Alcohol poisoning

100

This inhibitory neurotransmitter is enhanced by acute alcohol use, contributing to sedation and impaired motor coordination

GABA

200

In ancient Egypt, this was the name of a hearty beer consumed by the population.

Hek

200

The molecular characteristic shared by all alcohols

-OH (hydroxyl group)

200

The measure of alcohol levels in the blood (hint: BAC)

Blood Alcohol Concentration

200

When this organ system is affected by alcohol consumption, peripheral blood vessels dilate and an individual may look flushed and feel warm

Cardiovascular system

200

Chronic alcohol exposure leads to reduced firing rate, release, and metabolism of this neurotransmitter, producing negative affect during withdrawal

Dopamine

300

This alcoholic beverage was associated with the lower class, while beer was linked to the middle class in the 17th century

Gin

300

Which alcohol (from the textbook) that has a molecular structure containing 3 carbon atoms

Isopropyl Alcohol

300

Remaining 5% alcohol that’s in the lungs can be measured in one’s breath by this tool

Breathalizer

300

Lobe in the brain that is most affected by alcoholism

Frontal lobe

300

Although alcoholism prevalence is higher in men, this outcome is higher in female alcoholics

Mortality (death rate)

400

In this decade, Americans began educating society about the long-term effects of alcohol consumption and worked to reduce heavy drinking

1830s

400

Ingesting Methyl alcohol causes

Blindness, coma, and death

400

Certain enzymes in the gastric fluid, particularly alcohol dehydrogenase, are present more in this gender, 60% more which makes this gender less susceptible to alcohol

Men

400

In later stages, a patient with this syndrome remembers the remote past but almost nothing of what goes on around them

Wernicke Korsakoff syndrome

400

In men, but not women, subjective evaluation of alcohol-induced activation inversely correlates with the release of this neurotransmitter

Dopamine

500

The earliest known alcoholic beverage is believed to have been produced around this year

8000BC

500

A blood alcohol concentration (BAC) that is necessary to produce measurable behavioural effects

0.04%

500

Several enzymes in the liver are capable of oxidizing alcohol. This one is the most important one

Alcohol Dehydrogenase

500

A low to moderate daily dose of alcohol reduces the risk of this condition because it increases the amount of good cholesterol in the blood

Heart disease

500

This two-word term describes excessive neuronal firing that occurs when alcohol is removed after long-term use

Rebound Hyperexcitability 

M
e
n
u