Cargando…

Dietary Nutrient Intake, Alcohol Metabolism, and Hangover Severity

Several dietary components have been shown to influence alcohol metabolism and thereby potentially affect the development of a hangover. From the literature, it is evident that dietary nicotinic acid and zinc play a pivotal role in the oxidation of ethanol into acetaldehyde. The aim of the current s...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Verster, Joris C., Vermeulen, Sterre A., van de Loo, Aurora J. A. E., Balikji, Stephanie, Kraneveld, Aletta D., Garssen, Johan, Scholey, Andrew
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6780234/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31461972
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm8091316
_version_ 1783457083296841728
author Verster, Joris C.
Vermeulen, Sterre A.
van de Loo, Aurora J. A. E.
Balikji, Stephanie
Kraneveld, Aletta D.
Garssen, Johan
Scholey, Andrew
author_facet Verster, Joris C.
Vermeulen, Sterre A.
van de Loo, Aurora J. A. E.
Balikji, Stephanie
Kraneveld, Aletta D.
Garssen, Johan
Scholey, Andrew
author_sort Verster, Joris C.
collection PubMed
description Several dietary components have been shown to influence alcohol metabolism and thereby potentially affect the development of a hangover. From the literature, it is evident that dietary nicotinic acid and zinc play a pivotal role in the oxidation of ethanol into acetaldehyde. The aim of the current study was to associate dietary intake of nicotinic acid and zinc with hangover severity. To this end, data from n = 23 healthy social drinkers who participated in a naturalistic hangover study were analyzed. n = 10 of them reported to be hangover-resistant (the control group), whereas n = 13 reported to have regular hangovers (the hangover-sensitive group). Two 24 h dietary recall records were completed, one for the day of alcohol consumption and another one for an alcohol-free control day. Dietary nutrient intake was averaged and did not significantly differ between hangover-sensitive and hangover-resistant drinkers. For the hangover-sensitive drinkers, partial correlations with overall hangover severity were computed, controlling for estimated blood alcohol concentration. A bootstrapping technique was applied to account for the relatively small sample size. The results showed that dietary intake of nicotinic acid (r(PB) = −0.521) and zinc (r(PB) = −0.341) were significantly and negatively associated (p < 0.002) with overall hangover severity. Dietary zinc intake was also significantly and negatively associated with severity of vomiting (r(PB) = −0.577, p < 0.002). No significant associations with hangover severity were found for other nutrients, such as fat and fibers. In conclusion, this study suggests that social drinkers who have a higher dietary intake of nicotinic acid and zinc report significantly less severe hangovers. As hangover-resistant and hangover-sensitive drinkers had a similar dietary nutrient intake, the claim of being hangover-resistant must be based on other unknown biopsychosocial factors. These findings should be replicated in a larger sample and include more elaborate food frequency questionnaires or nutrient-specific dietary intake records for zinc and nicotinic acid, and preferably accompanied by nutrient assessments in urine and/or blood.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6780234
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-67802342019-10-30 Dietary Nutrient Intake, Alcohol Metabolism, and Hangover Severity Verster, Joris C. Vermeulen, Sterre A. van de Loo, Aurora J. A. E. Balikji, Stephanie Kraneveld, Aletta D. Garssen, Johan Scholey, Andrew J Clin Med Article Several dietary components have been shown to influence alcohol metabolism and thereby potentially affect the development of a hangover. From the literature, it is evident that dietary nicotinic acid and zinc play a pivotal role in the oxidation of ethanol into acetaldehyde. The aim of the current study was to associate dietary intake of nicotinic acid and zinc with hangover severity. To this end, data from n = 23 healthy social drinkers who participated in a naturalistic hangover study were analyzed. n = 10 of them reported to be hangover-resistant (the control group), whereas n = 13 reported to have regular hangovers (the hangover-sensitive group). Two 24 h dietary recall records were completed, one for the day of alcohol consumption and another one for an alcohol-free control day. Dietary nutrient intake was averaged and did not significantly differ between hangover-sensitive and hangover-resistant drinkers. For the hangover-sensitive drinkers, partial correlations with overall hangover severity were computed, controlling for estimated blood alcohol concentration. A bootstrapping technique was applied to account for the relatively small sample size. The results showed that dietary intake of nicotinic acid (r(PB) = −0.521) and zinc (r(PB) = −0.341) were significantly and negatively associated (p < 0.002) with overall hangover severity. Dietary zinc intake was also significantly and negatively associated with severity of vomiting (r(PB) = −0.577, p < 0.002). No significant associations with hangover severity were found for other nutrients, such as fat and fibers. In conclusion, this study suggests that social drinkers who have a higher dietary intake of nicotinic acid and zinc report significantly less severe hangovers. As hangover-resistant and hangover-sensitive drinkers had a similar dietary nutrient intake, the claim of being hangover-resistant must be based on other unknown biopsychosocial factors. These findings should be replicated in a larger sample and include more elaborate food frequency questionnaires or nutrient-specific dietary intake records for zinc and nicotinic acid, and preferably accompanied by nutrient assessments in urine and/or blood. MDPI 2019-08-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6780234/ /pubmed/31461972 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm8091316 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Verster, Joris C.
Vermeulen, Sterre A.
van de Loo, Aurora J. A. E.
Balikji, Stephanie
Kraneveld, Aletta D.
Garssen, Johan
Scholey, Andrew
Dietary Nutrient Intake, Alcohol Metabolism, and Hangover Severity
title Dietary Nutrient Intake, Alcohol Metabolism, and Hangover Severity
title_full Dietary Nutrient Intake, Alcohol Metabolism, and Hangover Severity
title_fullStr Dietary Nutrient Intake, Alcohol Metabolism, and Hangover Severity
title_full_unstemmed Dietary Nutrient Intake, Alcohol Metabolism, and Hangover Severity
title_short Dietary Nutrient Intake, Alcohol Metabolism, and Hangover Severity
title_sort dietary nutrient intake, alcohol metabolism, and hangover severity
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6780234/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31461972
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm8091316
work_keys_str_mv AT versterjorisc dietarynutrientintakealcoholmetabolismandhangoverseverity
AT vermeulensterrea dietarynutrientintakealcoholmetabolismandhangoverseverity
AT vandelooaurorajae dietarynutrientintakealcoholmetabolismandhangoverseverity
AT balikjistephanie dietarynutrientintakealcoholmetabolismandhangoverseverity
AT kraneveldalettad dietarynutrientintakealcoholmetabolismandhangoverseverity
AT garssenjohan dietarynutrientintakealcoholmetabolismandhangoverseverity
AT scholeyandrew dietarynutrientintakealcoholmetabolismandhangoverseverity