aspirin
One regular drink containing an ounce of alcohol will make your breath smell.
Is it okay to breath air?
Certain medications can cause a breath odor resembling alcohol, particularly those that affect the liver or metabolism. For instance, medications like metronidazole, used for bacterial infections, can lead to a foul smell similar to alcohol. Additionally, some sedatives and medications that contain ethanol or are metabolized to acetaldehyde may also contribute to this effect. It's important to consult a healthcare professional if you notice unusual breath odors while on medication.
No. Breathalyzers measure the amount of alcohol per unit volume. Breath strips only change the smell of the air, not the alcohol content.
Inhaling isopropyl alcohol fumes can be harmful and cause irritation to the respiratory system. It is not safe to intentionally smell isopropyl alcohol.
The way alcohol is detectable on breath is because air in the lungs is absorbing alcohol from the bloodstream, therefore there is no way to beat a breathalyzer. If you mean is there alcohol that cannot be "smelled" then yes because there are flavored drinks that you wouldn't be able to smell the alcohol.
-alcohol consumption -mouthwash -diabetic ketoacidosis. Not so much an alcohol smell, but a fruity smell as the body releases ketones to rid itself of severely high blood sugar. A person in this situation may appear to be intoxicated on alcohol because of the hyperglycemia. Blood tests would demonstrate a high blood sugar reading instead of a high blood alcohol level. This is a dangerous condition requiring hospitalization.
Vodka or Juice/Fruit drinksThe most commonly referred to beverage that doesn't actually have much of a smell is Vodka. Vodka tends not to leave a alcoholic breath nor does it really smell (the cheap stuff perhaps).Also, alcohol mixed with juice, wine, fruit or soda's don't really smell much like alcohol but rather the juice, wine or soda. Try Sangria for example, you think you're having lemonade but it's really a fruitwine.Others are: winecoolers, spiked lemonade drinks, acoholic fruit beverages, etc.
the direct answer is no...you can use things to mask or cover up the smell of alcohol (gum, mints or I guess garlic) but alcohol is absorbed into the blood. Your lungs absorb oxygen from the air you breath and expels carbon dioxide when you exhale. Likewise the alcohol in your blood does produce a smell of alcohol in the air you exhale. This will continue until your body metabolizes the alcohol in you're blood. So yes you can convert it up but you can't "kill" or eliminate it.
cause i just hit a j
The actual odor is not alcohol, but could be mistaken for it.
You can, but it won't change the alcohol concentration in your blood, and it won't hide the smell of alcohol on your breath.