News Release

Acetaldehyde may be the culprit behind hangovers

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research

  • Alcohol consumption is an integral part of the Japanese business culture.
  • Many East Asians have a mutant form of aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH), which is a key enzyme in the elimination of alcohol-induced acetaldehyde.
  • Individuals with inactive ALDH2 do not appear to be able to eliminate acetaldehyde from their systems, which increases their susceptibility to hangovers.
Alcohol consumption is an integral part of the Japanese business culture. Hangovers, however, can have substantial economic drawbacks. A recent study that examines hangovers and genetics among Japanese workers has found that the toxicity of acetaldehyde – the first product of alcohol metabolism – leads to hangovers in individuals with a particular genotype. Results are published in the July issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research.

"Many Japanese love the idea of group harmony," said Masako Yokoyama of the Mitsukoshi Health and Welfare Foundation and corresponding author for the study. "Going out drinking with various colleagues after work is an essential element of Japanese business society. It is socially acceptable to get fairly drunk on such occasions."

Hiromasa Ishii, president of the Japanese Medical Society of Alcohol Studies and Drug Dependence and Professor Emeritus at KEIO University in Tokyo, concurs. "Drinking alcoholic beverages with working colleagues after a customary 10-hour day at the office is an important part of business society in Japan, despite the fact that 40 to 45 percent of the Japanese people possess inactive ALDH2," he said.

Aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) is a key enzyme in the elimination of alcohol-induced acetaldehyde, which is a toxic compound. If the ALDH enzyme is normal, then acetaldehyde is metabolized very quickly. If it is not, people can experience cardiovascular complications, drowsiness, nausea, asthma and facial flushing. Many East Asians who have a mutant allele called ALDH2*2 also have inactive ALDH2, which usually inhibits them from heavy drinking because of the unpleasant consequences. However, an increasing number of Japanese who have inactive ALDH2 are also heavy drinkers.

Both Yokoyama and Ishii believe that, despite the initial inhibitory effects that a genetic mutation of ALDH can have on alcohol consumption, tolerance to the negative effects of alcohol and acetaldehyde may nonetheless develop if heavy drinking continues.

"Understanding the inhibitory effects of ALDH2 on drinking is incomplete," said Yokoyama, "however, we know that 26 percent of heavy drinkers among urban working men and 12 percent of alcoholics in Japan have inactive heterozygous ALDH2. It would appear that alcohol flushing diminishes in intensity in individuals with long or frequent drinking histories, suggesting the development of tolerance to acetaldehydemia."

For this study, researchers contacted an earlier cancer-study pool of 326 Japanese workers; 77 percent or 251 participants (139 males, 112 females) agreed to participate once again. In the earlier study, each participant answered a questionnaire about their flushing responses to alcohol; for this study, participants also completed a structured questionnaire about their drinking as well as hangovers. In addition, participants provided DNA samples, as well as mean corpuscular volume (MCV) samples, recently identified as a marker of acetaldehyde exposure in persons with inactive ALDH2.

Results indicate that individuals with inactive heterozygous ALDH2, a tendency to alcohol flushing, and increased MCV, also had a greater susceptibility to hangovers.

"The amount of drinking reported that led to a hangover was significantly less for both men and women who were heterozygous for the inactive ALDH2 compared to those with active ALDH2," said Yokoyama. "Further analyses of male participants indicated that those who had experienced more than three hangovers during the past year were more likely to report alcohol flushing and have elevated MCV, both of which are indicators of high acetaldehyde exposure due to drinking in persons with inactive ALDH2."

In other words, individuals with inactive ALDH2 do not appear to have the capability to eliminate acetaldehyde from their systems, which is why they are more susceptible to hangovers.

Both Yokoyama and Ishii noted that this study's findings highlight the importance that hyper-acetaldehydemia appears to play in the development of hangovers, help to reconfirm the more general role that alcohol-induced acetaldehyde plays in the damage of living human cells, and also point out the need for future research to focus on the damage caused by acetaldehyde rather than its precursor, alcohol.

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Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research (ACER) is the official journal of the Research Society on Alcoholism and the International Society for Biomedical Research on Alcoholism. Co-authors of the ACER paper, "Hangover Susceptibility in Relation to Aldehyde Dehydrogenase-2 Genotype, Alcohol Flushing, and Mean Corpuscular Volume in Japanese Workers," were Akira Yokoyama of the Kurihama Alcoholism Center at the National Hospital Organization; Tetsuji Yokoyama of the Department of Technology Assessment and Biostatistics at the National Institute of Public Health; and Kazuo Funazu, Genichi Hamada, Shuji Kondo, Takeshi Yamashita, and Haruo Nakamura of the Mitsukoshi Health and Welfare Foundation; all of Japan.


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