
Bloomberg: Hangovers Determined by Chemical-Processing Enzyme, Study Says
Low acetaldehyde (Pic courtesy of Mottanai Foundation)
July 14 (Bloomberg) -- How susceptible a person is to hangovers may be determined by an enzyme that helps them process the by-products of alcohol, according to a study to appear in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research. Researchers at the Mitsukoshi Health and Welfare Foundation in Tokyo studied the DNA of 251 Japanese men and women and questioned them about their alcohol consumption and how frequently they get hangovers. The researchers, led by Masako Yokoyama, found that people whose enzyme for processing a chemical called acetaldehyde was inactive had a greater susceptibility to hangovers. Acetaldehyde is a toxic chemical produced when the body begins to break down alcohol. "The amount of drinking reported that led to a hangover was significantly less for both men and women" who had the inactive acetaldehyde-processing enzyme, Yokoyama said in a statement. The findings have added importance in Japan, where as much as 45 percent of the population has the inactive enzyme and drinking is part of business culture, Yokoyama said. "Going out drinking with various colleagues after work is an essential element of Japanese business society," Yokoyama said in the statement. "It is socially acceptable to get fairly drunk such occasions."