Tuesday, March 02, 2010

BOOZE WITH NO HANGOVER?



















Drunkenness has always resembled an analog of Christianity. Pleasure comes with retribution hard on its heels. Sunday morning inevitably follows Saturday night, and price of pleasure must be paid in pain. But maybe all this will change, and drunks will not be running for Alka Seltzer (or more) while fearing the fizz.

“Booze, for all its magical wonder, still has big drawbacks: You can't sober up quickly, and you often get a hangover. Now Korean researchers have found a way of tweaking booze to limit the fallout — without cutting its strength. Doctors Kwang-il Kwon and Hye Gwang Jeong of Chungnam National University studied the properties of oxygenated alcohol - booze with oxygen bubbles added - which is a popular concoction in their country. In these drinks, oxygen is added the way carbonation is usually added to soda, and the scientists wanted to know if these oxygenated beverages affected people differently than non-oxygenated ones. The answer was a resounding yes. So why does adding O2 to booze lessen the nasty after effects? When you drink ethanol, you body needs to oxidize it to water and carbon dioxide in order to process it. This occurs via hepatic oxidation, where the liver does its thing to counteract the liquor you've just poured down your gullet. The enzymes that process alcohol require oxygen to function, and it's thought that by storing the oxygen in the alcohol itself, the system functions more quickly and efficiently.” (Click here for the whole story.)

2 comments:

  1. Does this mean a scotch and soda won't give you a hangover?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Pepsi5:54 PM

    The bubbles in scotch and soda are CO2. They just get you drunker quicker.

    ReplyDelete