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fat metabolism - How does the human body extract energy from ethanol? - Biology Stack Exchange
Human body parts in a vat of alcohol at the Strasbourg University Anatomical Institute. - Collections Search - United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
ON INTRACELLULAR FORMATION OF ETHANOL AND ITS POSSIBLE ROLE IN ENERGY METABOLISM | Alcohol and Alcoholism | Oxford Academic
Jaillant: Unlocking digital archives: cross-disciplinary... - Google Scholar
Our Body Produces Alcohol Naturally as Long as We Live.
Sergi: Digital pathology: the time is now to bridge... - Google Scholar
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Carayannis: The futures of Europe: Society 5.0 and... - Google Scholar
Hayashi: International standardization for smarter... - Google Scholar
Al-Asmari: Effects of postmortem interval, putrefaction,... - Google Scholar
Hayashi: International standardization for smarter... - Google Scholar
Microbiome-derived ethanol in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease - PubMed
Fermentation | Free Full-Text | The Human Body as an Ethanol-Producing Bioreactor—The Forensic Impacts
Fermentation | Free Full-Text | The Human Body as an Ethanol-Producing Bioreactor—The Forensic Impacts
Auto-brewery syndrome (ABS), also called gut fermentation syndrome, is an extremely infrequent but also underrecognized disorder where ethanol is produced endogenously, similar to a typical bioreactor. The reliability of forensic alcohol analysis results is frequently challenged as the ethanol concentration in the breath, blood, and/or urine constitutes important evidence for prosecuting drivers under the influence of the alcohol. This further emphasizes the need to understand ABS, as in legal proceedings it is often presented as grounds for acquittal due to the concept that the findings could have corresponded to endogenously produced ethanol. However, this rare and underdiagnosed medical condition should not be considered as purely a lawyer’s favorite argument. Manifestations of ABS can have a severe impact on a patient’s life and pose social consequences as well. Unfortunately, barely anything has been unearthed, and aspects such as genetic susceptibility, gut-mucus-eating microorganisms, and fecal microbiome transplantation were reviewed for the first time in this context. The framework of this review was not limited to the gut microbiota exclusively; moreover, the overgrowth of microorganisms is linked to the use of antibiotics. Studies have indicated that carbohydrate fermentation occurs in locations other than in intra-intestinal flora. Accordingly, the literature was searched for cases of patients with ABS with yeast infections in their genitourinary or oral systems.
·mdpi.com·
Fermentation | Free Full-Text | The Human Body as an Ethanol-Producing Bioreactor—The Forensic Impacts
Fermentation | Free Full-Text | The Human Body as an Ethanol-Producing Bioreactor—The Forensic Impacts
Fermentation | Free Full-Text | The Human Body as an Ethanol-Producing Bioreactor—The Forensic Impacts
Auto-brewery syndrome (ABS), also called gut fermentation syndrome, is an extremely infrequent but also underrecognized disorder where ethanol is produced endogenously, similar to a typical bioreactor. The reliability of forensic alcohol analysis results is frequently challenged as the ethanol concentration in the breath, blood, and/or urine constitutes important evidence for prosecuting drivers under the influence of the alcohol. This further emphasizes the need to understand ABS, as in legal proceedings it is often presented as grounds for acquittal due to the concept that the findings could have corresponded to endogenously produced ethanol. However, this rare and underdiagnosed medical condition should not be considered as purely a lawyer’s favorite argument. Manifestations of ABS can have a severe impact on a patient’s life and pose social consequences as well. Unfortunately, barely anything has been unearthed, and aspects such as genetic susceptibility, gut-mucus-eating microorganisms, and fecal microbiome transplantation were reviewed for the first time in this context. The framework of this review was not limited to the gut microbiota exclusively; moreover, the overgrowth of microorganisms is linked to the use of antibiotics. Studies have indicated that carbohydrate fermentation occurs in locations other than in intra-intestinal flora. Accordingly, the literature was searched for cases of patients with ABS with yeast infections in their genitourinary or oral systems.
·mdpi.com·
Fermentation | Free Full-Text | The Human Body as an Ethanol-Producing Bioreactor—The Forensic Impacts
Ivan Šoša
Fermentation | Free Full-Text | The Human Body as an Ethanol-Producing Bioreactor—The Forensic Impacts
Raju: Big data, machine learning, and artificial... - Google Scholar
QUADAS-2: a revised tool for the quality assessment of diagnostic accuracy studies - PubMed
Doctor Ex Machina: A Critical Assessment of the Use of Artificial Intelligence in Health Care - PubMed
Pélissier-Alicot: Synthetic cannabinoids: State-of-the-a... - Google Scholar
Quireyns: State‐of‐the‐art analytical approaches... - Google Scholar
Ahmed Alaa El-Din: ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN FORENSIC... - Google Scholar
González-Domínguez: Metabolite profiling for the... - Google Scholar
Fermentation | Free Full-Text | The Human Body as an Ethanol-Producing Bioreactor—The Forensic Impacts
Fermentation | Free Full-Text | The Human Body as an Ethanol-Producing Bioreactor—The Forensic Impacts
Auto-brewery syndrome (ABS), also called gut fermentation syndrome, is an extremely infrequent but also underrecognized disorder where ethanol is produced endogenously, similar to a typical bioreactor. The reliability of forensic alcohol analysis results is frequently challenged as the ethanol concentration in the breath, blood, and/or urine constitutes important evidence for prosecuting drivers under the influence of the alcohol. This further emphasizes the need to understand ABS, as in legal proceedings it is often presented as grounds for acquittal due to the concept that the findings could have corresponded to endogenously produced ethanol. However, this rare and underdiagnosed medical condition should not be considered as purely a lawyer’s favorite argument. Manifestations of ABS can have a severe impact on a patient’s life and pose social consequences as well. Unfortunately, barely anything has been unearthed, and aspects such as genetic susceptibility, gut-mucus-eating microorganisms, and fecal microbiome transplantation were reviewed for the first time in this context. The framework of this review was not limited to the gut microbiota exclusively; moreover, the overgrowth of microorganisms is linked to the use of antibiotics. Studies have indicated that carbohydrate fermentation occurs in locations other than in intra-intestinal flora. Accordingly, the literature was searched for cases of patients with ABS with yeast infections in their genitourinary or oral systems.
·mdpi.com·
Fermentation | Free Full-Text | The Human Body as an Ethanol-Producing Bioreactor—The Forensic Impacts
alchahols of the human body - Google Search
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NSW Police Legatee Stories | NSW Police Legacy
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