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Find out how credible hangover "remedies" are and what can actually help ease your pain
Hangover Facts
An estimated 77 per cent of people who drink will experience a hangover. The medical term for an alcohol hangover is “veisalgia,” a combination of the Norwegian word “kveis” (uneasiness following debauchery) and the Greek term “algia” (pain). Dehydration, poor sleep and an inflammatory component play a role in causing hangovers.
Here’s what we know:
- Alcohol inhibits the kidneys’ ability to retain fluid, which causes dehydration.
- Overindulging can affect your sleep, particularly REM sleep, and you will wake up feeling less rested after a night of indulging.
- Studies have found an increase of inflammatory markers in the blood after drinking, which supports the theory that alcohol-induced inflammation in the brain and body account for the memory and cognitive changes that come with a hangover.
- A recent study in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs suggests that smoking while you’re drinking affects hangover sensitivity and severity.
- A study published in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research has found that mixing diet drinks with alcohol is linked to getting drunker faster, contributing to a worse hangover the next day.
- The presence of congeners – the chemicals that give colour, smell and flavour to alcohol – can cause a worse hangover the next day. The more dark alcohols you drink (brandy, scotch, red wines), the greater the hangover risk.
- While everyone is different, on average, the body can process about one drink per hour, so sticking to that rate for a limited period can minimize the chance of a hangover.
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