What Exactly is a Hangover?
Two individuals can be at the same party, drinking the same alcoholic beverage, the same number of glasses, over the same amount of time and one will become drunk and have a wicked hangover the next day and the other one won't. What causes one to have a hangover and not the other?
A hangover follows a night or possibly day of drinking too many alcoholic drinks. More alcohol than your system can handle. The result of this overload of alcohol is that your body becomes depleted in nutrients and water. The result is that you become dehydrated. Your body makes up for this dehydration by taking water from where it can, basically your brain. The brain then shrinks and the result is a really bad headache. Dehydration also gives you what is referred to as "cotton mouth". Many individuals experience nausea and vomiting as a result of all the alcohol and sugar that has now upset the stomach.

Symptoms of a hangover:
Signs of dehydration
Dry mouth
Fatigue
Headache
Nausea
Weakness
Anxiety
Irritability
Negativity
Difficulty concentrating
Light and sound sensitivity
Difficulty sleeping

Two individuals can be at the same party, drinking the same alcoholic beverage, the same number of glasses, over the same amount of time and one will become drunk and have a wicked hangover the next day and the other one won't. What causes one to have a hangover and not the other?

How To Cure A Hangover

Eat a healthy meal that includes starches and essential vitamins and minerals, especially B vitamins. Food will absorb the alcohol you consume and lessen the affects of the alcohol.

There are a number of factors that play a role in why one person experiences a hangover after drinking alcohol and another individual won't. Other than the amount of alcohol consumed and the type of alcohol ingested, how fast you drink it and how many you have in what time frame can also have a role in whether or not you become drunk. There is also the factor of how well your body metabolizes alcohol. Our bodies metabolize the things we drink and eat in different ways. Metabolism depends on what is being consumed and if it being consumed with other things like are we eating at the same time we are drinking alcohol? The body absorbs alcohol faster when we eat food at the same time.

Water has an effect on the impact of alcohol on our bodies too. When we drink lots of water before we start drinking alcohol, during the time we are drinking and after we are finished with our drinking event then the water that we drink can lessen the effect that alcohol has on our system and we become less dehydrated than what we would have become had we not had the water. Alcohol contains ethanol, which is what causes the dehydration.

Alcohol consumption causes chemical reactions within the body including the way the liver has to work to break down the ethanol contained in the alcohol. The reaction in the cells of the liver when it is trying to breakdown the ethanol impairs the liver's ability to supply glucose to the tissues within the body such as the brain tissue. Glucose in the brain is how the brain gets energy. When the brain does not receive the glucose, we experience fatigue, weakness, moodiness and sometimes it can affect our ability to concentrate.

Congeners are the chemical by-products of the process of alcohol fermentation. These congeners can exaggerate (make worse) the symptoms of a hangover. Dark alcoholic drinks contain more congeners, which is why those who drink dark alcoholic beverages have more intense hangovers than those who drink clear colored alcoholic beverages.

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