How long does it take you to recover from a hangover?

edited January 2014 in Chit chat
I don't drink usually so when I have some beers on new years eve I feel bad for bout 4 days!
Post edited by slenkar on

Comments

  • edited January 2014
    I don't usually get hangovers, but when I do... about 12 hours, from discovery of hangover. There will almost certainly be some sleep during this period.
  • edited January 2014
    About 4 hours after I wake up :D

    Although with me having Pneumonia I haven't touched a drop since New Years Eve, and I've probably completely detoxed by now.

    I have my suspicions the next time I drink I'll be hammered off about 3 beers, and it'll take about a week to recover from it :lol:
    Every night is curry night!
  • edited January 2014
    never used to get em...now I find I wake up okish but then get hit by a full on bazzer mid afternoon.....especially if I'm at work :(
  • edited January 2014
    Never.


    I'm Irish I dont eat, I just drink.......
  • edited January 2014
    it really depends, but I've noticed that with age it takes me longer and longer (but never more than a day... 2 tops)
  • edited January 2014
    Drink lots of water, and have a banana it is full of potassium and other ****. helps getting over a hangover quicker.

    Also before drinking have a fryup The oils and fats can clog up the duodenum (small intestine) which will slow down the amount of alcohol going into your system.

    How Your Body Processes Alcohol

    Food in your diet must be digested before being absorbed by your cells, but alcohol included in your diet flows directly through your body?s membranes into your bloodstream, which carries alcohol to nearly every organ in your body.

    The amount of alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) your body manufactures is influenced by your ethnicity and your gender. Asians, Native Americans, and Inuits secrete less alcohol dehydrogenase than do most Caucasians, and the average woman (regardless of her ethnicity) makes less ADH than the average man does.

    As a result, more unmetabolized alcohol flows from their tummies into their bloodstreams, and they?re likely to become tipsy on smaller amounts of alcohol.

    Here?s a road map to show you the route traveled by the alcohol in every drink you take.

    Flowing down the hatch from mouth to stomach: The unmetabolized alcohol flows through your stomach walls into your bloodstream and on to your small intestine.

    Stopping for a short visit at the energy factory: Most of the alcohol you drink is absorbed through the duodenum (small intestine). From there it flows through a large blood vessel into your liver.

    In the liver, an enzyme similar to gastric ADH metabolizes the alcohol, which is converted to energy by a coenzyme called nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD). NAD is also used to convert the glucose you get from other carbohydrates to energy; while NAD is being used for alcohol, glucose conversion grinds to a halt.

    The normal, healthy liver can process about 1/2 ounce of pure alcohol (that?s 6 to 12 ounces of beer, 5 ounces of wine, or 1 ounce of spirits) in an hour. The rest flows on to your heart.

    Taking time out for air: Entering your heart, alcohol reduces the force with which your heart muscle contracts. You pump out slightly less blood, blood vessels all over your body relax, and your blood pressure goes down temporarily. The contractions soon return to normal, but the blood vessels may remain relaxed and your blood pressure lower for as long as half an hour.

    Meanwhile, alcohol flows in blood from your heart through your pulmonary vein to your lungs. Now you breathe out a tiny bit of alcohol every time you exhale, and your breath smells of liquor. Then the newly oxygenated, still alcohol-laden blood flows back through the pulmonary artery to your heart, and up and out through the aorta.

    Rising to the surface: In your blood, alcohol raises your level of high-density lipoproteins (HDLs), although not necessarily the good ones that carry cholesterol out of your body. Alcohol also makes blood less likely to clot, temporarily reducing your risk of heart attack and stroke.

    Alcohol makes blood vessels expand, so more warm blood flows up from the center of your body to the surface of the skin. You feel warmer and, if your skin is fair, you may flush and turn pink. (Asians, who tend to make less alcohol dehydrogenase than do Caucasians, often experience a characteristic flushing when they drink even small amounts of alcohol.) At the same time, tiny amounts of alcohol ooze out through your pores, and your perspiration smells of alcohol.

    Encountering curves in the road: Alcohol is a sedative. When it reaches your brain, it slows the transmission of impulses between nerve cells that control your ability to think and move. That?s why your thinking may be fuzzy, your judgment impaired, your tongue twisted, your vision blurred, and your muscles rubbery.

    Alcohol reduces your brain?s production of antidiuretic hormones, which keep you from making too much urine. You may lose lots of liquid, vitamins, and minerals. You also grow very thirsty, and your urine may smell faintly of alcohol. This cycle continues as long as you have alcohol circulating in your blood, or in other words, until your liver can manage to produce enough ADH to metabolize all the alcohol you?ve consumed.

    Most people need an hour to metabolize the amount of alcohol (1/2 ounce) in one drink. But some people have alcohol circulating in their blood for up to three hours after taking a drink.


    But I'm Irish . I'm always pissed.....
  • zx1zx1
    edited January 2014
    As i've got older it can take up to a day to get rid of a bad hangover, which is spent in bed. Although sometimes they go away in the afternoon, usually a couple of painkillers, a cup of tea and a few hours asleep i bed and i feel fine.
    The trouble with tribbles is.......
  • edited January 2014

    Most people need an hour to metabolize the amount of alcohol (1/2 ounce) in one drink. But some people have alcohol circulating in their blood for up to three hours after taking a drink.


    I think you might have got this information from a US source ;) , "one drink" (in terms of measures of alcohol) and "ounces" of alcohol will be meaningless to most people here. As far as I know the body can metabolise one unit of alcohol per hour, that's roughly half a pint. Drunkeness and attendant hangover is less about how much alcohol you drink in many cases and about how quickly you drink it and it gets into your bloodstream. If you drink six pints over six hours you'll have less of a hangover than if you drink four pints over two hours.
  • edited January 2014
    Depends on what I've drunk:

    (1) just a drink or two more than I should have had - 3 or 4 hours next morning for hangover, cured with coffee and fresh air

    (2) mixing drinks or far to much of something I don't normally drink - probably 12 hours, and not drinking for the next 24 hours

    (3) more than a few Bregdog Tokyo stouts - raging nausea and incapacitated for about 2 days!
  • edited January 2014
    In my experience the best way to avoid a hangover is to drink at least a pint of water at the end of the night and, importantly, to drink it once you've stopped needing to go for a piss every half hour because that means that the alcohol isn't messing with your body and expelling all the water you take in any more.

    The best way to avoid one, though, is, of course, just not drinking too much. I read an interesting thing about alcoholism the other day which said that one of the problems alcoholics have is an inability to stop drinking once they've started. Abstaining isn't actually that hard (unless the person is physically addicted or self-medicating), the problem is being able to go to the pub and just have one or two pints; many people find they keep drinking until they are forced to stop ("time gentlemen please!"). The way to avoid a hangover (and becoming an alcoholic) is apparently about being able to stop boozing when you don't have to and before you're actually drunk.
  • edited January 2014
    Zagreb wrote: »
    The best way to avoid one, though, is, of course, just not drinking too much. I read an interesting thing about alcoholism the other day which said that one of the problems alcoholics have is an inability to stop drinking once they've started. Abstaining isn't actually that hard (unless the person is physically addicted or self-medicating), the problem is being able to go to the pub and just have one or two pints; many people find they keep drinking until they are forced to stop ("time gentlemen please!"). The way to avoid a hangover (and becoming an alcoholic) is apparently about being able to stop boozing when you don't have to and before you're actually drunk.

    I can relate to that. If I'm sitting watching telly with Mrs Spoons I tend to drink at a more civilised pace (half a bottle of cider an hour) than if I'm up the pub with my mates.

    I do have a tendency to drink to excess when I'm on my own, and lately I find it just makes me depressed the next morning. No headache, more like a very black, sombre mood that it takes the whole day to shake off. I do like a drink but if this is how it makes me feel I'd rather go tee-total (or go back to Mrs Spoons' snails pace drinking)
    The comp.sys.sinclair crap games competition 2015
    "Let's not be childish. Let's play Spectrum games."
  • edited January 2014
    About 4 hours after I wake up :D

    Hair o' the dog doesn't count! ;)

    Sorry to hear about your feeling poorly though dude. Hope you get on the mend soon.

    I can't handle hangovers so well these days - took me a couple of days to shake off the NYE cobwebs this year. Doing my usual January drying out now. Lasted until mid-February last year, but this year I have a gig (RX Bandits, in case anyone wonders) to go to on the 3rd (I think), so that'll no doubt turn into a beer fest! Actually, I'm also going to see Jefferson Starship in a couple of weeks, but that won't be a beery kind of gig... ;)

    Another vote for the pint-of-water-before-bed here. Usually works wonders...
  • zx1zx1
    edited January 2014
    Sometimes i arrive home in such a state the last thing on my mind is water, i just want to crash in my bed:smile:
    The trouble with tribbles is.......
  • edited January 2014
    the last one took about 2 weeks, along with a GP supervised staged programme of tranquilisers, anti-pyschotics, and vitamins (and I strongly resisted being hospitalised)

    that was over 5 years ago though :)
  • edited January 2014
    not touched a drop of alcohol since Xmas 2010 and yet I still get the occasional day where I'll wake up and feel like I've had a monster beer sesh the night before. luckily these 'hangover flashbacks' only last about 5 minutes
  • edited January 2014
    def chris wrote: »
    not touched a drop of alcohol since Xmas 2010 and yet I still get the occasional day where I'll wake up and feel like I've had a monster beer sesh the night before. luckily these 'hangover flashbacks' only last about 5 minutes

    Aren't those also known as "colds"? ;)
  • edited January 2014
    Only when they're accompanied by a bad case of sniveling, high temperature, and feeling ill for about a week.

    so, erm. ..not really :confused:
  • edited January 2014
    0 minutes.

    I no longer drink enough these days to warrant a hangover. When the hangover began going into day 2 was when I decided that drinking vast amounts of alcohol was no longer for me.

    Best decision I ever made...
    I wanna tell you a story 'bout a woman I know...
  • zx1zx1
    edited January 2014
    I remember years ago a mates' brother drank a whole bottle of vodka AND beer at a New Year's party, he was in bed for about 5 days! His skin had a slightly yellowish tinge to it, he never did that again:grin:
    The trouble with tribbles is.......
  • edited January 2014
    Takes me about 4 hours to sort out a bad hang over.
  • edited January 2014
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-25639406

    I'm hot an alconolic, onest hofficer. I'm just "bibulous".
    The comp.sys.sinclair crap games competition 2015
    "Let's not be childish. Let's play Spectrum games."
  • edited January 2014
    The entire day if I eat and drink a lot of water. Two if I don't. That leaves me with about a day of work per week.
    To 1 or to 0?
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