Myths and Facts About Treating a Hangover

Myths and Facts About Treating a Hangover

Claremont Colonic Newsletter

Are you celebrating the first day of 2023 with a hangover?

If so, you might be looking for a method to ease your misery. There are certainly a lot of so-called hangover cures, some dating back centuries.
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“The ancient Greeks believed that eating cabbage could cure a hangover, and the Romans thought that a meal of fried canaries would do the trick,” said Dr. John Brick, former chief of research at the Center of Alcohol Studies, Education and Training Division at Rutgers University in New Jersey, who authored “The Doctor’s Hangover Handbook.”

“Today, some Germans believe that a hearty breakfast of red meat and bananas cures hangovers. You might find some French drinking strong coffee with salt, or some Chinese drinking spinach tea,” he said. “Some of the more unusual hangover cures are used by some people in Puerto Rico, who rub half a lemon under their drinking arm.”

In truth, the only cure for a hangover is time, according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.

“A person must wait for the body to finish clearing the toxic byproducts of alcohol metabolism, to rehydrate, to heal irritated tissue, and to restore immune and brain activity to normal,” according to the institute. That recovery process can take up to 24 hours.

Are there things you can do to ease your transition? Possibly, experts say, but many common hangover “cures” may make your hangover worse. Here’s how to separate fact from fiction.

Myth: Drinking a bit more helps

Having another drink, or the “hair of the dog that bit you,” is a well-known cure for a hangover, right? Not really, experts say.

The reason some people believe it works is because once the calming effects of alcohol pass, the brain on a hangover is overstimulated. (It’s also the reason you wake up in the middle of the night once your body has metabolized alcohol.)

“You’ve got this hyperexcitability in the brain after the alcohol is gone,” said Dr. Robert Swift, a professor of psychiatry and human behavior at Brown University’s Warren Alpert Medical School in Providence, Rhode Island.

“If you look at the brain of somebody with a hangover, even though the person might feel tired, their brain is actually overexcited,” he said.

Consuming more alcohol normalizes the brain again, “because you’re adding a sedative to your excited brain,” Swift said. “You feel better until the alcohol goes away and the cycle repeats in a way.”

Fact: Drinking coffee can speed up recovery

The answer is yes, depending on hangover symptoms, Brick said. If you’re a coffee drinker, skipping your morning cup of joe may lead to caffeine withdrawal on top of your hangover.


“If you have a hangover, have a quarter of a cup of coffee,” Brick suggested. “See if you feel better — it takes about 20 minutes for the caffeine to start to have some noticeable effect.

“If coffee doesn’t make you feel better, don’t drink anymore. Obviously, that’s not the cure for your hangover.”

Myth: Eating greasy food helps

Forget eating a greasy breakfast in the wee hours after a night of drinking — you’re adding insult to injury, Swift said: “Greasy food is harder to digest, so it’s probably good to avoid it.”

Eating greasy food also doesn’t make much sense. The alcohol we drink, called ethyl alcohol or ethanol, is the byproduct of fermenting carbohydrates and starches, usually some sort of grain, grape or berry. While it may create some tasty beverages, ethanol is also a solvent, Brick said.

“It cuts through grease in your stomach much the same way it cleans grease off oily car parts,” he said.

Instead, experts suggest using food to prevent hangovers, by eating before you have that first drink.

“Eating food loaded with protein and carbohydrates can significantly slow down the absorption of alcohol,” Brick said. “The slower the alcohol gets to your brain, the less rapid the ‘shock’ to your brain.”

Fact: Electrolytes help

Alcohol dehydrates, so a headache and other hangover symptoms may be partly due to constricted blood vessels and a loss of electrolytes, essential minerals such as sodium, calcium and potassium that your body needs.

If you’ve vomited, you’ve lost even more electrolytes, and all of this can lead to fatigue, confusion, irregular heart rate, digestive problems and more.

Replacing lost fluids with water or a type of sports drink with extra electrolytes can help boost recovery from a hangover, Swift said.

Myth: Taking acetaminophen before bed can prevent a hangoverr

Taking over-the-counter pain meds can be dangerous, especially if you take too many while intoxicated, experts say. Taking an acetaminophen, such as Tylenol, can further damage your overtaxed liver, while aspirin and ibuprofen can irritate your stomach lining.

“You should never, never take alcohol with acetaminophen or Tylenol,” Swift said. “You can actually cause liver damage from an overdose of Tylenol.”

But aspirin, ibuprofen and naproxen are “theoretically” OK, he added.

“Even though they tend to be anti-inflammatory in the body, they can cause inflammation in the stomach,” Swift said. “Don’t take them on an empty stomach; always take anti-inflammatories with food.”

Fact: Drink as much water as you can

While most alcohol is handled by the liver, a small amount leaves the body unchanged through sweat, urine and breathing.

Get up, do some light stretching and walking, and drink plenty of water to encourage urination, Brick said.

“Before you go to sleep and when you wake up, drink as much water as you comfortably can handle,” he said. You can also take a multivitamin “before you hit the shower in the morning (to) replenish lost vitamins, minerals and other nutrients.”

If you would rather have something warm and soothing, Brick suggested broth or other homemade soups.

“These will also help to replace lost salts, including potassium and other substances,” he said, “but will not make you sober up faster or improve impairment due to intoxication or hangover.”

Myth: Hangover pills can help

Store shelves are packed with so-called hangover cures. Unfortunately, there’s no proof they work. In 2020, researchers published what they called the “world’s largest randomised double-blind placebo-controlled” trial of supplements containing vitamins, minerals, plant extracts and antioxidants and found no real improvement in hangover symptoms.

Even if one solution works, it likely won’t fix all your symptoms, experts say.

“The effects of alcohol and alcoholic beverages are so complicated, so complex,” Swift said, “that any solution might address one or two of the symptoms but won’t address them all.”

What does work for a hangover? Time. It will take time for your body to release all the toxins causing your misery, experts say. And the only way to prevent a hangover is to abstain.


Contributor: Sandee LaMotte, CNN

Series: Know Your Body

Series: Know Your Body –The Nervous System

Claremont Colonic Newsletter

Your nervous system is your body’s command center. Originating from your brain, it controls your movements, thoughts and automatic responses to the world around you. It also controls other body systems and processes, such as digestion, breathing and sexual development (puberty). Diseases, accidents, toxins and the natural aging process can damage your nervous system.

Overview

What is the nervous system?


Your nervous system guides almost everything you do, think, say or feel. It controls complicated processes like movement, thought and memory. It also plays an essential role in the things your body does without thinking, such as breathing, blushing and blinking.

Your nervous system affects every aspect of your health, including your:

  • Thoughts, memory, learning, and feelings.
  • Movements, such as balance and coordination.
  • Senses, including how your brain interprets what you see, hear, taste, touch and feel.
  • Sleep, healing and aging.
  • Heartbeat and breathing patterns.
  • Response to stressful situations.
  • Digestion, as well as how hungry and thirsty you feel.
  • Body processes, such as puberty.
This complex system is the command center for your body. It regulates your body’s systems and allows you to experience your environment.

A vast network of nerves sends electrical signals to and from other cells, glands, and muscles all over your body. These nerves receive information from the world around you. Then the nerves interpret the information and control your response. It’s almost like an enormous information highway running throughout your body.

Function

What does the nervous system do?


Your nervous system uses specialized cells called neurons to send signals, or messages, all over your body. These electrical signals travel between your brain, skin, organs, glands and muscles.

The messages help you move your limbs and feel sensations, such as pain. Your eyes, ears, tongue, nose and the nerves all over your body take in information about your environment. Then nerves carry that data to and from your brain.

Different kinds of neurons send different signals. Motor neurons tell your muscles to move. Sensory neurons take information from your senses and send signals to your brain. Other types of neurons control the things your body does automatically, like breathing, shivering, having a regular heartbeat and digesting food.

Anatomy

What are the parts of the nervous system?


The nervous system has two main parts. Each part contains billions of cells called neurons, or nerve cells. These special cells send and receive electrical signals through your body to tell it what to do.

The main parts of the nervous system are:

Central nervous system (CNS): Your brain and spinal cord make up your CNS. Your brain uses your nerves to send messages to the rest of your body. Each nerve has a protective outer layer called myelin. Myelin insulates the nerve and helps the messages get through.

Peripheral nervous system: Your peripheral nervous system consists of many nerves that branch out from your CNS all over your body. This system relays information from your brain and spinal cord to your organs, arms, legs, fingers and toes. Your peripheral nervous system contains your:
  • Somatic nervous system, which guides your voluntary movements.
  • Autonomic nervous system, which controls the activities you do without thinking about them.
Conditions and Disorders

What conditions and disorders affect the nervous system?


Thousands of disorders and conditions can affect your nerves. An injured nerve has trouble sending a message. Sometimes it’s so damaged that it can’t send or receive a message at all. Nerve injury can cause numbness, a pins-and-needles feeling or pain. It may be difficult or impossible for you to move the area that’s injured.

Nerve damage can happen in several ways. Some of the most common causes of nerve damage include:

  • Disease: Many infections, cancers, and autoimmune diseases like diabetes, lupus and rheumatoid arthritis can cause nervous system problems. Diabetes can lead to diabetes-related neuropathy, causing tingling and pain in the legs and feet. A condition called multiple sclerosis attacks the myelin around nerves in the CNS.
  • Stroke: A stroke happens when one of the brain’s blood vessels becomes blocked or suddenly bursts. Without enough blood, part of the brain dies. Then it can’t send messages via nerves. A stroke can cause nerve damage ranging from mild to severe.
  • Accidental injury: Nerves can be crushed, stretched, or cut in an accident. Car crashes and falls are common injuries that can damage nerves anywhere in your body.
  • Pressure: If a nerve is pinched or compressed, it can’t get enough blood to do its job. Nerves can be pinched or trapped for many reasons, such as overuse (as in carpal tunnel syndrome), a tumor, or structural problems like sciatica.
  • Toxic substances: Chemotherapy medicines, illegal drugs, excessive alcohol and poisonous substances can cause peripheral neuropathy or nerve damage. People with kidney disease are more likely to develop nerve damage because their kidneys have a hard time filtering out toxins.
  • Aging process: As you get older, your neurons’ signals may not travel as fast as they used to. You may feel weaker, and your reflexes may slow down. Some people lose sensation in their fingers, toes or other parts of their body.
How common are these conditions?
Some causes of nerve damage occur more frequently than others. They include:

  • Diabetes: This disorder of the endocrine system causes nerve damage called diabetes-related neuropathy. Around 30 million Americans have diabetes and nearly 50% of them have some nerve damage. Neuropathy of diabetes usually affects the arms, legs, hands, feet, fingers and toes.
  • Lupus: About 1.5 million Americans live with lupus, and 15% of them have experienced nerve damage.
  • Rheumatoid arthritis: People with rheumatoid arthritis can also develop neuropathy. Rheumatoid arthritis affects more than 1.3 million people in the U.S. It’s one of the most common forms of arthritis.
  • Stroke: Around 800,000 Americans have a stroke every year. Strokes occur more often in people over age 65.
Care

How do I keep my nervous system healthy?


Your nervous system is the command center for your entire body. It needs care to keep working correctly. See your doctor regularly, eat a healthy diet, avoid drugs, and only drink alcohol in moderation. The best way to avoid nerve damage from disease is to manage conditions that can injure your nerves, such as diabetes.

Frequently Asked Questions

When should I call my doctor?


Call your doctor right away if you have any sudden changes in your health, such as losing coordination or noticing severe muscle weakness. You should also see your doctor if you have:

  • Vision problems or headaches.
  • Slurred speech.
  • Numbness, tingling, or loss of sensation in your arms or legs.
  • Tremors or tics (random muscle movements).
  • Changes in behavior or memory.
  • Problems with coordination or moving your muscles.


Contributor: Clevelandclinic.org

New Study: This Common Oil May Harm Your Liver

New Study: This Common Oil May Harm Your Liver

Claremont Colonic Newsletter
Fish oil, derived from the fatty tissues of fish, is a great way to get more omega-3 fatty acids into your diet. The supplement has been shown to help ADHD, Alzheimer’s, cardiovascular disease, weight loss and more. But for fish oil, it’s possible to get too much of a good thing. In fact, fish oil may increase the risk of dangerous fatty liver disease.
According to a new study from the University of Granada in Spain, and published in The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry, long-term consumption of sunflower oil or fish oil can lead to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, or NASH. This condition is the more serious form of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), which affects 80 to 100 million people around the world. Liver inflammation and liver scarring characterize NASH, and it resembles liver damage caused by alcohol abuse.

Around 20 percent of Americans have NASH, and it’s most common in older adults. Among the risk cancers for NASH are obesity, high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, high cholesterol and apparently life-long fish oil consumption.

Effects of oil consumption later in life

The new study led by José Luis Quiles, professor of physiology at the University of Granada, looked at the effects of oil consumption later in life to understand the association between NASH and dietary choices. The research team examined the effect of different dietary oils including fish oil, sunflower oil, and virgin olive oil on rat livers.

Quiles and his team looked for liver scarring, oxidative stress, the effects on gene expression and the length of telomeres, which can tell scientists about the body’s ability to reproduce cells, in the rats’ livers. Oxidative stress refers to the body’s inability to balance free radicals that damage cells. Telomeres are located at the end of each DNA strand and help protect chromosomes within the cells. Reduced telomere lengths are associated with cellular aging; however, if your telomeres are too long, you experience an increased risk for cancer.

As another part of the experiment, the team investigated how livers age over time. Our livers simply accumulate fat as we age, but as Quiles writes, “regardless of this accumulation, some livers age in a healthier way than others and with a greater or lesser predisposition to certain diseases.”

What we eat impacts how well our livers age

For instance, sunflower oil consumed over one’s entire life can trigger liver fibrosis, or scarring of the liver. When a person has liver fibrosis, their liver cannot function properly and cirrhosis sets in. Cirrhosis is a chronic condition that may lead to liver failure. Sunflower oil was also responsible for increased liver oxidation and changes in the rats’ gene expression.

Subjects that consumed fish oil also experienced age-related liver oxidation, as well as a decrease in the electron transport chain activity in cells’ mitochondria. The mitochondria are the “powerhouses” of the cell. A decrease in the electron transport chain activity results in impaired cell function. Interestingly, fish oil also increases telomere lengths in the liver, which could be problematic if, as stated above, they grow too long. However, olive oil caused the least amount of damage to the liver. That’s good news for those of us who prefer a Mediterranean diet.

Get omega-3s directly from the source

Most doctors and nutritionists will tell you the best source for any nutrient is directly from the whole food from which it is derived. So, rather than always turning to fish oil supplements for your omega-3s, try to eat three to four servings of fatty fish, like salmon, each week. Adding flaxseed oil to your salads or smoothies can help increase levels of omega-3s in your diet, too.

To avoid some of the adverse effects of fish oil supplements, choose from the following omega-3 rich foods:
  • Atlantic mackerel
  • Alaskan wild-caught salmon
  • Grass-fed beef
  • Fontina cheese
  • Spinach
  • Firm tofu
  • Navy beans
  • Anchovies
  • Chia seeds
  • Flaxseed oil
  • Eggs
If you’re like me, you’re probably about to toss out your fish oil supplements. The good news is, there are plenty of ways to get as much, if not more, benefit from whole foods.


Contributor: Megan Winkler, Alternative Daily

5 Tips for Taming Travel Tension Over the Holidays

5 Tips for Taming Travel Tension Over the Holidays

Claremont Colonic Newsletter
For many people, travel is a necessary part of celebrating the holidays with loved ones. This means enduring all the stressful hiccups that can come with traveling and spending time away from the comforts of your own home.
Every year, my family kicks off the season by watching the classic comedy “Planes, Trains and Automobiles,” starring Steve Martin and the late John Candy. In it, the two men are strangers who end up stuck together, dealing with a comically inordinate number of travel-related issues while trying to get home for Thanksgiving.

There’s a good chance your holiday travel won’t get as complicated as Martin’s and Candy’s, but you may face delays, diversions and many hours of sitting that can take a toll on you mentally and physically. So, whether you’re driving to Grandma’s for Thanksgiving or flying to see family in another country, try the five tips below to reduce stress and tension so you can enjoy the holidays.

Take control of your posture and breathing

When you sit for long periods while traveling, your posture often suffers. Given the intimate relationship of your breathing pattern and your posture, slumping while seated leads to shallow, rapid breathing, which incites your body’s stress response. It’s a vicious cycle that increases physical and mental tension.

That’s why it’s important to take control of your breathing at least once an hour while traveling to help restore your posture and cultivate a sense of calm. Taking just five or six long, deep breaths while focusing on getting your low ribs to move as demonstrated in this video can make a big difference!

Just 90 seconds of deep breathing elicits a relaxation response that decreases your heart rate, blood pressure and stress hormone production, according to research.

Drink enough nonalcoholic fluids

Those muscle cramps and achy joints you experience on the road may have a lot to do with your fluid intake. Considering that our bodies are mostly water, hydration is important for proper joint lubrication and circulation. But your hydration level doesn’t just affect you physically. When you’re dehydrated, it increases your body’s cortisol (primary stress hormone) levels, which can lead to feelings of anxiety, exhaustion and overall irritability.

Your access to drinking water may be limited while traveling, so it’s important to plan ahead. You can’t bring bottled water through Transportation Security Administration checkpoints, and no one likes to pay the exorbitant prices for bottles of water at the airport. Thankfully, most airports have filtered water stations to refill bottles for free. So pack a reusable water bottle and, if you’re driving, don’t forget to bring a cooler with water.

Even when you aren’t traveling, the holidays make it easy to become dehydrated. With all the festivities, we often forget to drink as much water as normal, especially when cocktails are flowing. But alcoholic beverages are no substitute for water because they’re dehydrating.

Alcohol suppresses natural production of the antidiuretic hormone vasopressin, which keeps us from urinating too much. Without it, we find ourselves in the bathroom more often. Counter the dehydrating impact of alcohol by drinking one glass of water for every cocktail.

Stand and walk every opportunity you can

Studies abound regarding the health dangers of prolonged sitting, yet few people seem to make an effort to avoid it while traveling. Looking around the airport, you’ll find most everyone sitting at the gate waiting to get on their plane, where they will inevitably remain seated for at least a couple of hours or more.

Break up bouts of sitting by taking advantage of opportunities to stand and walk around whenever possible. At the airport, take a walk around your terminal. Some airports even have yoga rooms with public access. When traveling by car, find a park or even a mall on your route where you can get out and take a 10-minute walk.

Stretch out the tension

Lots of sitting during travel also means compressed side waist muscles, overused hip flexors and tight low-back muscles. If you want to be more comfortable and avoid pain when traveling, you need to stretch out those muscles whenever possible.

My go-to travel stretch is the warrior hip flexor release

Here’s how to do it:

  • Stand to the right of a wall, chair or other stable surface. Place your left hand on it for support.
  • Step your right foot back into a short lunge position, dropping your back heel and pointing your toes out slightly, as shown.
  • Bend your front knee to align above your ankle, while your back leg remains straight.
  • Inhale as you lift your right arm up and over your head.
  • Exhale as you side bend to the left, feeling your left lower ribs rotate inward.
  • Avoid arching your lower back.
  • Hold for three long, deep breaths. Repeat on the other side.

Take recovery seriously

You might be so relieved to get to your destination that you think plopping down in a comfy chair is all you need. But it’s even more beneficial to get your legs up above your heart, which promotes venous blood flow and helps reduce lower-body swelling.

A great way to accomplish this is with the popular restorative yoga pose known as “legs up the wall.” You can do this on the floor with your straight legs up the wall or with your knees bent and calves resting on a chair seat. If you don’t want to lie on the floor, you can lay backward on your bed and put your legs up the headboard. Feel free to place a pillow or folded blanket under your head.

Once in the position, stay there a few minutes, taking some long, deep relaxing breaths.

In addition to changing your relationship with gravity to relieve tension, it’s important to get enough sleep. This is especially true if you have traveled to a different time zone. Work in naps, if necessary, to make up for any sleep deficits that could negatively affect your health and wellness.

Despite all the joys the holidays bring, it’s important not to overlook the ways seasonal trips can inadvertently drag you down. Using the five tips above will help keep travel tension at bay and your holiday spirits high.


Contributor: Dana Santas, CNN Health