6 Tips to Beat a Hangover
Ask a dozen
people how to cure a hangover and you’ll get a dozen different answers. Eat
greasy grub. Drink coffee. Pop over-the-counter pain relievers. Do any of them
work? "There’s no magic potion that gets rid of a hangover," says
George Koob, MD, director of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism (NIAAA). The only way you can avoid that tired-headachy-nauseated
feeling is to drink less. But if you think you might overdo it, these steps
could help tone down your morning-after symptoms.
Prepare With
Prickly Pear: While most over-the-counter hangover remedies won’t help
much, there’s one supplement that may do you some good -- but you'll have to
plan ahead. If you take prickly pear extract several hours before you drink, it
might lower your day-after symptoms by about half. Experts don't know how it
works, but the extract has a protein that curbs the inflammation you can get
from drinking too much. That may help hold off a hangover.
Eat Up and
Drink Water: Don’t wait until the end of the night to polish off a pizza.
It might be too late. "The alcohol is already in your body, so eating food
or drinking water won’t affect how it’s absorbed," says Aaron White, PhD,
senior advisor to the director of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism. But if you eat a meal and have water while you're throwing back
those cocktails, your hangover may not be as bad. "Having food in your
stomach while drinking reduces how high your peak blood-alcohol concentration
(BAC) gets by about a third," White says.
The less drunk you get, the less crummy you’ll feel the next day. And
fluid from water slows the rate at which your body absorbs alcohol. This will
also lower your overall BAC. "It’s a good idea to alternate alcoholic and
non-alcoholic drinks," White says. Along with drinking water throughout
the night, be sure to down even more before you go to sleep. "Alcohol is a
diuretic," Koob says. This means it makes you pee a lot, which causes you
to lose a lot of liquid. "Hangover symptoms are partly due to dehydration,
so replacing that fluid loss can help." It’s also smart to keep a bottle
of water by your bedside so you can hydrate as soon as you wake up in the
morning.
Chose Clear
Booze: The color of the spirits you drink may affect how you feel tomorrow.
You may be better off sticking to a clear booze like vodka and gin, or the
clear versions of rum and tequila. The reason has to do with chemical compounds
called congeners. Those are "anything in alcohol besides alcohol and
water," Koob says. Darker drinks like bourbon, scotch, and tequila tend to
have higher levels. Those compounds can bring on the inflammation that makes
your hangover worse.
Don't Light
Up And Drink: For some people, the two go together. But you may pay the
price. "Smoking cigarettes while drinking results in worse
hangovers," says Damaris Rosenhow, PhD, associate director of the Center
for Alcohol and Addiction Studies at Brown University. One theory is that both
alcohol and smokes affect your sleep, and poor shut-eye may make you feel even
crummier.
Have a Drink
the Next Day: If you're looking for a short-term fix, this may help -- but
not for long. There’s a scientific explanation for why the "hair of the
dog that bit you" works. When you drink, alcohol holds back a brain
chemical called glutamate. That causes your brain to make more and more of it,
Koob says. When the alcohol wears off, you have a bunch of it floating around
in your brain. It may be to blame for hangover symptoms like irritability,
headaches, nausea, and fatigue. Down another drink or two the next morning, and
you’ll hold off the glutamate all over again. Your hangover symptoms may
improve. But it won't last. "Once you stop drinking you’ll still have to
deal with a hangover," Koob says.
Treat Your
Symptoms: Although there’s no cure for a hangover, there are ways to treat
what ails you. If you have a headache, reach for an anti-inflammatory
medication like ibuprofen. Upset stomach? Pepto-Bismol might help. If you’re
tired, have some coffee. One thing you shouldn’t take is any other medication
that has the ingredient acetaminophen. It can cause serious liver problems when
it mixes with alcohol. While ibuprofen is a better option, you still need to be
careful. "Taking too much ibuprofen can upset your stomach, and it may
already be queasy from your hangover," Koob says.
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