Wine, bitter and sweet, hot, there is the power of warm meridians. A moderate amount of alcohol can refresh you. However, for patients, it is not advisable to drink alcohol and even alcohol in certain patients, especially in treatment. So, which patients should be banned?

Gastrointestinal disease. Patients suffering from peptic ulcer, gastritis or enteritis, especially the former should be banned. Because ethanol is a stimulant, it increases the secretion of gastric acid and aggravates the condition. In addition, alcohol damages the gastric mucosa, which can cause gastric mucosal bleeding and even gastric perforation. The drinking of enteritis patients speeds up bowel movements, leading to diarrhea, and severe malnutrition.

Liver disease. Ethanol damages liver cells, and people who suffer from liver disease drink alcohol, which further reduces liver function. The metabolite of ethanol, acetaldehyde, accumulates in the body and causes acetaldehyde poisoning. It also causes alcoholic cirrhosis.

diabetes. Alcohol damages the pancreas, and drinking alcohol in diabetics can make the insufficiency of the pancreas worse, resulting in worse illness. Diabetics who are treated drink alcohol. Due to the synergistic effect of ethanol and insulin, blood glucose is severely reduced and leads to irreversible neuropathy, which can also cause acetaldehyde poisoning.

High blood pressure. Drinking alcohol in hypertensive patients will further aggravate arteriosclerosis, increase blood pressure, and cause cardiovascular and cerebrovascular accidents. Hypertensive patients drink during treatment, and certain drugs in antihypertensive drugs, such as hydralazine, thiazide, and stilbethidine, will increase the anesthetic effect of ethanol, which can easily cause vomiting, dizziness, and walking. Stable, incoherent, drowsiness, coma, or postural hypotension.

Epilepsy. Drinking alcohol in epilepsy patients can increase brain dysfunction and increase the number of epileptic seizures. The use of ethanol in the treatment of epilepsy patients for alcohol consumption can accelerate the metabolism of anti-pain drugs, affect anti-epilepsy treatment, and multiply the disease.

In addition, chronic cholecystitis, tumors, tuberculosis, and schistosomiasis cannot drink alcohol.