Urine ethanol concentration and alcohol hangover severity
Files
Publication date
2017-01
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Abstract
Background: The aim of this study was to examine the relationship between urine ethanol concentration and alcohol hangover severity. Methods: N = 36 healthy social drinkers participated in a naturalistic study, comprising a hangover day and a control day. N = 18 of them have regular hangovers (the hangover group), while the other N = 18 claim to be hangover immune (hangover-immune group). On each test day at 9.30 am, urine samples were collected. Participants rated their overall hangover severity on a scale from 0 (absent) to 10 (extreme), as well as 18 individual hangover symptoms. Results: Urine ethanol concentration was significantly higher on the hangover day when compared to the control day (p = 0.006). On the hangover day, urine ethanol concentration was significantly lower in the hangover-immune group when compared to the hangover group (p = 0.027). In the hangover-immune group, none of the correlations of urine ethanol concentration with individual hangover symptoms was significant. In contrast, in the hangover group, significant correlations were found with a variety of hangover symptoms, including nausea, concentration problems, sleepiness, weakness, apathy, sweating, stomach pain, thirst, heart racing, anxiety, and sleep problems. Conclusion: Urine ethanol levels are significantly associated with the presence and severity of several hangover symptoms.
Keywords
Alcohol, Ethanol, Hangover, Severity, Pharmacology
Citation
van de Loo, A, Mackus, M, Korte-Bouws, G, Brookhuis, K, Garssen, J & Verster, J 2017, 'Urine ethanol concentration and alcohol hangover severity', Psychopharmacology, vol. 234, no. 1, pp. 73-77. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00213-016-4437-0