One beer or one oz of liquor takes one hour
a month
If you leave it off long enough all the alcohol will evaporate.
Rubbing alcohol will do nothing to change the color of your hair.In extreme cases, this can leave hair so brittle that it may crack and break
24 hours
Alcohol can stay in the system for around 24 hours. However, in order to be safe it's best to wait 48 hours before getting any blood drawn depending on how much alcohol was consumed.
it depends on how many milliliters of alcohol you consume divided by the average ratio of the alcohol content. The alcohol content is displayed on the back of the bottle.
It depends on the spirit you have dunk. After a beer 3 hours are enough.
Alcohol leaves the body at the rate of about .015 of BAC per hour.
3 hours
3 hours
Fermented anything contains alcohol, so yes it will. But I don't think Coca-Cola will ferment for a long time because there are too many chemicals to prevent it.
As a blood alcohol concentration (by percentage) anywhere between 0.3-0.45 is considered increasingly lethal (with 0.45 being the lethal dose for most people) and 0.5 and above is certain to end life, a blood alcohol concentration of 2.29 would most likely have to be administered post-mortem as the subject would have been dead long before being capable of consuming enough alcohol to achieve this. Such a blood alcohol concentration is unlikely to be dangerous to the dead.
8 hoursIt depends on how much you drink. One 8 ounce glass of beer, 5 ounce glass of wine, and one shot all have the same alcohol content. Just drinking one of those would take your body at least an hour for the alcohol to leave. It also depends on your weight.
Within a day or so, but it might take as much as a year to repair the damage it caused. Blood Alcohol Content (BAC) drops at the rate of about .015 of your BAC every hour after you're done with your last drink. Some damage (i.e., cirrhosis of the liver) isn't repairable.
how long does Oxycontin stay in the blood
Blood alcohol concentration )(BAC) drops at the rate of .015 of BAC per hour.
Short answer: it stays longer than it would when a person is alive, but determining the amount and the source is difficult because of contamination and the fact that alcohol is a by-product of decomposition in most kinds of tissue. Accurate measurement of blood alcohol in cadavers is difficult, and gives widely varying results depending on cause of death, trauma, and other factors. If it is obtained from venous blood immediately after death, it is fairly accurate. In the case of cadavers, the preferred method is testing alcohol content of the vitreous humor (VH) in the eye. (Hey, you asked....) Although this seems to work well when gas chromatography analysis is used, a legally-accepted correlation between VH alcohol content and blood alcohol content v. time of death has yet to be established.