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Alcohol rehab in Texas

Looking at a Texas alcohol rehab for a loved one or for yourself can be a frustating experience. What type of Texas drug rehab is the best? How long should the alcohol treatment be? Should the alcohol detox or rehab be out-patient or residential rehabilitation treatment?

Drug rehab services can help you find:

  • Alcohol rehabs in Texas
  • Alcohol Addiction treatment
  • Alcohol rehabilitation
  • Alcohol Detox centers
  • Alcohol Withdrawal treatments

Alcohol affects people differently, depending on their size, sex, body build, and metabolism. General effects are a feeling of warmth, flushed skin, impaired judgment, decreased inhibitions, muscular in coordination, slurred speech, and memory and comprehension loss. In states of extreme intoxication, vomiting is likely to occur, possibly accompanied by incontinence, poor respiration, a fall in blood pressure, and in cases of severe alcohol poisoning, coma and death.

Drinking heavily over a short period of time usually results in a "hangover" - headache, nausea, shakiness, and sometimes vomiting, beginning from 8 to 12 hours later. A hangover is due partly to poisoning by alcohol and other components of the drink, and partly to the body's reaction to withdrawal from alcohol.

Combining alcohol with other drugs can make the effects of these other drugs much stronger and more dangerous. Many accidental deaths have occurred after people have used alcohol combined with other drugs. Cannabis, tranquillizers, barbiturates and other sleeping pills, or antihistamines (in cold, cough, and allergy remedies) should not be taken with alcohol. Even a small amount of alcohol with any of these drugs can seriously impair a person's ability to drive a car.

In some regions of the world, especially in and around the Arabian peninsula, the trade of alcohol is strictly prohibited. For example, Pakistan bans the trade because of its wide Muslim population. Likely, Saudi Arabia forbids the importation of alcohol into its kingdom.
Also, rural villages or even entire counties in a few US states such as Alabama, Alaska, Texas, Kentucky, Houghton, NY and North Carolina are seen as "dry," and ban the sale, trade, and even consumption of alcoholic beverages. Similar laws are found in Aboriginal communities of central and northern Australia, as a consequence of alcohol abuse.

Can mixing alcohol with other drugs be dangerous?
Yes. Alcohol and other substances don’t mix. Mixing alcohol with other substances can even be lethal! If you mix cannabis or club drugs (e.g., ecstasy, ketamine, GHB) with alcohol, it makes it difficult to make smart choices. This signifies you are more likely to get into hazardous situations, to be injured or to injure somebody else.
If you mix alcohol with certain medicines—either those prescribed by your physician or certain over-the-counter medicines (like cough and cold medicines, and aspirin)—your body may react violently. You might have cramps or headaches or might vomit. Certain combinations can cease your breathing. It is particularly hazardous to mix alcohol and other drugs (such as cannabis) with driving.
If you've been drinking alcohol, stimulant substances (e.g., caffeine, cocaine, amphetamines) can trick you into thinking you're sober—but you're not. You might feel more awake, but you’re still impaired—and you will be until the alcohol leaves your system.

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