• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

There’s A Surprisingly Easy Way To Sober Up When Drunk

December 19, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

There are many folk remedies for having over-indulged in alcohol, but alas they usually fail in testing. This is fine when you’ve just had one beer too many, less so when facing fatal alcohol poisoning. However, a study has shown you can achieve surprising results through controlled heavy breathing.

An estimated 3 million people die each year from alcohol-related causes. In many cases that has to do with long-term over-consumption, but for some it’s the consequence of an extreme bender when hospital facilities were unavailable.

Advertisement

Dr Joseph Fisher of Canada’s University Health Network noted that once ethanol hits the bloodstream 90 percent is cleared by being metabolized in the liver, an organ that can’t be hurried. Aside from dialysis, all that can currently be done for someone with a dangerously high blood alcohol level is to treat the symptoms, for example, ensuring they get sufficient oxygen to the brain.

The other 10 percent of alcohol elimination takes place through the kidneys and lungs. The latter is the reason breath tests reveal blood alcohol concentrations, and we can tell someone has been drinking by smelling the air they breathe out. Fisher and colleagues wondered if harder and faster breathing might process the alcohol more quickly. The idea has been used for removing harmful blood impurities like carbon monoxide acquired in less fun ways.

In Scientific Reports, the team reveals the idea can work, but some help is needed. “You can’t just hyperventilate, because in a minute or two you would become light-headed and pass out,” Fisher pointed out in a statement. 

Advertisement

For all the harm carbon dioxide causes in the atmosphere, it plays a vital role in the bloodstream, and breathing too fast expels it, along with the ethanol. If the tingling in the limbs and light-headedness doesn’t stop the over-breathing, fainting will.

Dr Fisher and his team created a device that captures some of the expelled CO2 and returns it to the body on inhaling, thus maintaining optimum levels of the gas in the blood-stream while alcohol is steadily eliminated. “It’s a very basic, low-tech device that could be made anywhere in the world: no electronics, no computers or filters are required,” Dr Fisher . “It’s almost inexplicable why we didn’t try this decades ago.”

So far the team’s sample group is limited to five healthy men with blood alcohol concentrations around 0.1 percent; unlikely to be dangerous unless behind the wheel of a car or operating machinery. How well it would work in a clinical setting remains to be seen, since people drunk enough to be in danger might not follow instructions. Nevertheless, those who participated in the trial were able to increase ethanol elimination by a factor of three. Participants found the process boring, but not uncomfortable. If nothing else, Fisher’s device could be useful for those who need to sober up fast after overindulging.

Advertisement

This article was originally published in November 2020.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Poor countries say lack of vaccines may exclude them from climate talks
  2. Japan’s SBI to extend offer for Shinsei by a month on some conditions
  3. Scaling across Series A to C
  4. IFLScience The Big Questions: Why Is The Universe Made Of Matter And Not Antimatter?

Source Link: There's A Surprisingly Easy Way To Sober Up When Drunk

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Did NASA’s Viking Mission Find Evidence Of Extant Life On Mars? It’s Not As Out There As It Sounds
  • World’s Oldest RNA Recovered From Baby Mammoth Beautifully Preserved In Permafrost For 40,000 Years
  • No Mining, No Machines – How The Future Of Technology Depends On Greener Mines
  • “It Was A Huge Surprise”: Dinosaur Eggs Were Speckled And Colorful, Just Like Birds’ Eggs
  • Meet The Peacock Spiders: Secretive, Small But Oh So Special
  • “Sudden Unexplained Death” In US Turns Out To Be World’s First Confirmed Death From Tick-Spread “Meat Allergy”
  • What’s The Longest Border In The World? It’s A Lot Weirder Than It Looks On A Map
  • “The Fall Of Icarus”: You Have Never Seen An Astrophotography Picture Like This!
  • Blue Origin Sends NASA Mission To Mars, Followed By First-Ever Successful Landing Of New Glenn’s Booster
  • This 4,300-Year-Old Silver Goblet May Contain Earliest Known Depiction Of Cosmic Genesis
  • Filter-Feeding Pterosaur Becomes The First Extinct Species Discovered In Fossil Vomit
  • We Jinxed It – Golden Comet C/2055 K1 (ATLAS) Has Now Broken Into Pieces
  • This Plant Hoards Rare Earth Elements That The World Desperately Needs
  • Lupus Linked To Virus That Over 95 Percent Of Us Carry – And Now We Finally Know How
  • This Whale’s Meal Plan? Over 70,000 Squid A Year, And It’ll Dive Incredible Depths To Get Them
  • There Are 23 Countries in North America: Do You Know Them All?
  • “Non-Gravitational Acceleration” Of Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS Explained In New Study
  • Antiperspirant Before Bed, Or In The Morning? There Is A Right Answer
  • When Did Dogs Become Dogs? Familiar Forms Started To Arise Over 10,000 Years Ago
  • At 900 Meters Across, Earth’s Largest Modern Impact Crater Has Just Been Found By Scientists
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version