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  1. In this episode, I discuss the physiological effects that drinking alcohol has on the brain and body at different levels of consumption and over time. I also...

    • 121 min
    • 7.1M
    • Andrew Huberman
  2. May 27, 2024 · Other Alcoholic Beverages. Alcoholic root beers range from about 5 to 8% alcohol by volume. This is similar to the ABV of other beers. Wines range from about 5 to 15% ABV and spirits range from roughly 35 to 45% ABV. Although most similar to beer, alcoholic root beer typically contains more sugar than beer.

    • Myth One: Caffeine (or A Shower) Can Sober You Up
    • Myth Two: Drinking Kills Brain Cells
    • Myth Three: Mixing Types of Alcohol Gets You More Drunk
    • Myth Four: "Breaking The Seal" Causes You to Urinate More Often
    • Myth Five: Drinking One Drink An Hour Keeps You Sober Enough to Drive
    • Myth Six: You Can Trick A Breathalyzer
    • Myth Seven: Different Types of Alcohol Affect Your Behaviour
    • Myth Eight: Shrimp, Green Tea, Coffee, More Alcohol, etc. Will Cure A Hangover

    We've all been there before: you have too many drinks and you need to get sober as quick as possible. Someone around you tells you about their sure-fire way to get sober. It's almost always drinking coffee, but you might also hear that you can sober up by taking a cold shower. Unfortunately, none of these things work. Studies show that drinking a c...

    Alcohol does all kinds of things to your body, but killing brain cells is not one of them. Over the years, several studiesshowthat alcohol doesn't kill brain cells, but it does affect how the brain works. The New York Times sums up the research well: So, too much alcohol can impair brain function (including memory). However, it's not because brain ...

    If you're going out on the town and want to stay awake and aware all night, it's pretty common advice to steer clear of mixing alcohol. Which is to say, if you start with beer, stick with beer. If you start with whiskey, stick to whiskey. And so on. Unfortunately, mixing liquor types doesn't affect how drunk you get over the course of the evening. ...

    As the legend goes, when you go to the bathroom for the first time during a night of drinking, you break a magical "seal" that makes it so you pee more often as the night goes on. Of course, no seal exists. Going to pee doesn't make you have to pee more, and holding it won't make you have to go less. The seal is a myth, but, alcohol itself does mak...

    As a general rule, it's a pretty common recommendation to limit your drinking to one drink an hour if you need to drive. The myth says that since your body processes alcohol at about a rate of one drink an hour, if you pace yourself you won't get too drunk to drive. Of course, this one's tough to quantify because we all process alcohol at different...

    You'll find a lot of different myths about tricking breathalyzers. The most common include sucking on a penny, eating a breath mint, and even one case of eating underwear. The myth assumes that breathalyzers detect alcohol by the smell, but that's not how they work. In simple terms, breathalyzers detect alcohol by using a chemical reaction to remov...

    We've all heard it before: whiskey makes you rowdy, tequila makes you dance, rum chills you out, and whatever else. People love to claim that certain types of alcohol turn them into certain types of people. We didn't find any studies that looked at this idea in full, but that's because from a purely chemical level, the type of alcohol doesn't affec...

    Everyone has their own hangover cure. Perhaps an older brother suggested a hot shower and cup of coffee, or a wise coworker insists that eggs on toast slathered in hot sauce fixes everything. Most of these "cures" are bogus, but curiously we're still not completely certain what the best way to treat a hangover is. In fact, one review suggeststhat t...

  3. Follow alcohol on its journey through the body to find out how it causes drunkenness and why it affects people differently. -- Ethanol: this molecule, made o...

    • 5 min
    • 8.7M
    • TED-Ed
  4. The major producers of root beer include A&W, Barq's, Dad's, Hires, and Mug. Root beer cannot make you drunk. Root beer made by the traditional process contains 2% alcohol, but sometimes, more alcohol may be added to make it a stronger alcoholic drink. It was classically made from the root bark of the sassafras tree or vine of Smilax ornata ...

  5. Check out these eight factors that can affect how quickly you start feeling buzzed, tipsy or drunk: Your age: Bottom line, as you get older, it takes less alcohol for you to feel buzzed, tipsy or drunk. There are two reasons. 1) As people get older, the amount of water in their body decreases. The less water in your body, the quicker each drink ...

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  7. Hops is a diuretic, effectively causing you to lose more water through peeing than you receive through drinking. So, when you drink equal dose of ethanol by consuming strong liquor versus beer, you get much worse hangover from beer due to excessive loss of water. Source - Ringnes beer course in Oslo, Norway.

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