Abstract
Previous research has focused primarily on the severity of the alcohol hangover. Much less is known about the duration of the alcohol hangover. The objective of this analysis was to examine the average duration of the alcohol hangover.
N=811 Dutch students, aged 18-30 years old, completed a survey on alcohol consumption and their latest alcohol hangover. Overall hangover severity was reported for every two hours after waking up (starting 4am until midnight). Hangover duration was calculated from the moment of stopping alcohol consumption until the first time hangover severity scores reached zero.
During the drinking session that resulted in their latest hangover they consumed a mean (SD) of 5.9 (6.2) alcoholic drinks, followed by 6.5 (2.0) hours of sleep. The start of the alcohol hangover was not assessed, as it can be assumed that BAC approached zero while participants were sleeping. From the moment of stopping alcohol consumption, the average duration of the alcohol hangover was 18.4 (3.8) hours. For the majority of drinkers, hangover duration ranged from 14 to 23 hours. Alternatively, the hangover lasts approximately 12 hours from the time of waking up. Hangover duration correlated significantly with hangover severity and total sleep time, but no significant association was found with the number of alcoholic drinks that were consumed.
The duration of the alcohol hangover ranged from 14 to 23 hours, with an average of 18.4 hours after stopping drinking, or alternatively, about 12 hours after waking up.
Author Contributions
Copyright© 2018
van Schrojenstein Lantman Marith, et al.
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Competing interests The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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Introduction
The alcohol hangover refers to the combination of mental and physical symptoms, experienced the day after a single episode of heavy drinking, starting when blood alcohol concentration approaches zero Up to now, no effective hangover treatment is available Surprisingly, scientific papers usually do not describe the time course and duration of the alcohol hangover. In 1974, Ylikahri et al examined 23 male subjects after consuming alcohol (1.5 g/kg body weight)
Results
Data from N=811 subjects was included in the analysis (31.0% men). Their mean (SD) age was 20.1 (2.2) years old and they reported consuming on average 18.2 (15.9) alcoholic drinks per week and experiencing 2.4 (2.3) hangover per month. On the evening before their latest hangover they consumed 5.9 (6.2) alcoholic drinks, followed by 6.5 (2.0) hours of sleep. Overall hangover severity was 23.0 (13.7). Note: hangover duration was computed from the moment of stopping alcohol consumption until the first time hangover severity scores reached zero. Despite the fact that men consumed significantly more alcohol than women (11.0 versus 3.6 alcoholic drinks, p=0.0001), it appears that men recover significantly faster from the alcohol hangover than women (17.9 versus 18.8 hours, p=0.002). Hangover duration correlated significantly with hangover severity (r=0.627, p=0.0001) and total sleep time (r=0.144, p=0.0001). No significant correlations were found between hangover duration and weekly alcohol consumption (r=-0.032, p=0.364), the number of past month experienced alcohol hangovers (r=0.032, p=0.375), or the number of alcoholic drinks consumed on the evening before their latest hangover (r=-0.063, p=0.073). As the analysis included all subjects who reported having a hangover, also subjects with relative low to moderate alcohol consumption levels were included. In one of our previous naturalistic studies it was observed that drinkers consumed 10 to 12 alcoholic drinks on the evening that resulted in their hangover
Discussion
For the majority of drinkers, the duration of the alcohol hangover ranged from 14 to 23 hours, with an average of 18.4 hours. A positive significant correlation was found showing that more severe hangovers were of longer duration. However, the number of alcoholic drinks consumed was not significantly associated with the duration of the alcohol hangover. Our findings are in line with those observed by Ylikari et al. who also reported a hangover duration of 12 hours after waking up, corresponding to the average reported hangover duration in the current study The usual limitations of survey research also apply to the current study. Data are self-reported and may therefore be crude estimates, and perhaps affected by recall bias. This may especially be the case for variables such as the number of drinks consumed. On the other hand, having a hangover is not a regular every day event. Given that adverse effects may have a significant impact on cognitive functioning and mood The importance of our findings with respect to drug development are evident. If a hangover potential hangover treatment wants to be effective, the durations of its effects should last approximately the whole next day following an evening of heavy alcohol consumption. As the majority of drinkers in this study went to bed between midnight and 2am, adding an average hangover duration of 18 hours suggests that hangovers last until the next evening. Also from a fundamental scientific viewpoint the current findings are important. That is, future studies investigating the alcohol hangover can now more accurately determine the range of time during which they have to assess/score hangover severity and corresponding symptom severity in order to collect useful data. With regard to biological samples, it would be interesting to assess certain biomarkers of alcohol consumption over the total time of hangover duration and determine for example with variation of severity of specific hangover symptoms. Currently, most hangover studies assess performance and mood in the morning hours. Future studies should extent these assessments into the afternoon and early evening to determine variations throughout the day, and follow recovery from the after effects of a heavy drinking session. In the current survey only overall hangover severity was assayed. In future studies it would also be interesting to investigate individual hangover symptoms such as nausea, headache and sleepiness. Knowledge on the time course of these individual symptoms, and possible variations in severity scores over time, is essential in the development of an effective hangover cure, as ideally the duration of its treatment effect should reflect that of the core disabling symptoms of the alcohol hangover. From the current analysis, it can be concluded that the duration of the alcohol hangover ranged from 14 to 23 hours, with an average of 18.4 hours after stopping drinking, or alternatively, about 12 hours after waking up.