Last User To Post Here Wins

DeletedUser

Guest
No way? How do you come to that conclusion. I don't think that's right.
 

DeletedUser

Guest
If you drink too much of a certain fluid, it will overflow your cells.

Water, Milk, and Beer are fine examples. Beer takes a toll at your liver, and if you drink to much, you get ascites due to liver cirrhosis. Within two years, if you keep drinking, your liver will fail. Thus giving a huge possibility you will die from such manner.
 

DeletedUser

Guest
Hmm, I must be doing something wrong. I've been drinking for 8 years straight.
 

DeletedUser

Guest
Lolno

You could end up as this old chap:

Jim is 55 years old. He used to visit his local pub most days to meet up with his mates. He had two to three pints at lunch and a couple of drinks in the evening (roughly 60 units of alcohol a week). Recently, over the course of a few weeks he noticed his abdomen had become swollen and tight. After tests, it was discovered that this was due to the build up of fluid (ascites), caused by cirrhosis of the liver. Jim took his doctor’s advice and has stopped drinking completely. After six months the fluid has gone and he is now feeling well and fitter, even though his liver will never fully recover. If he had continued drinking even a small amount, things could have been worse
 

DeletedUser

Guest
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