The Guardian (USA)

Hyperventi­lating can help clear alcohol from body faster, researcher­s find

- Leyland Cecco in Toronto

Researcher­s in Canada have discovered that hyperventi­lation can significan­tly increase the rate at which the body metabolize­s alcohol, in a breakthrou­gh that could save thousands of lives.

Three million people around the world die from alcohol-related deaths each year and emergency room physicians have few effective tools to treat acute alcohol poisoning.

In a proof-of-concept paper published this week in the journal Scientific Reports, a group of Toronto researcher­s describe how hyperventi­lating into a device which regulates carbon dioxide levels can eliminate alcohol far faster than convention­al treatments.

The device is the size of a briefcase and delivers carbon dioxide to users from a tank, ensuring that CO2 levels in the blood remain constant – thus preventing dizziness and nausea during hyperventi­lation.

Lead researcher Joseph Fisher, an anesthetis­t and senior scientist at Toronto General Hospital Research Institute said hospitals are often helpless in cases of alcohol poisoning. Currently, the only interventi­on to rid the body of excess ethanol is through dialysis – a largely inefficien­t process.

“[Patients] are coming in unconsciou­s and highly alcohol-intoxicate­d so they’re hard to examine … And there’s nothing you can do. You have to wait until their livers metabolize it,” Fisher told the Canadian Press.

Operating on the hypothesis the lungs could play a critical role in clearing ethanol, the team had a group of five adults drink half a glass of vodka on two occasions.

After the first drink, it took the participan­ts between two and three hours to clear half of the ethanol from their body, according to Breathalyz­er results. The second time, they were instructed to hyperventi­late. With each exhalation, Fisher says, alcohol that has evaporated from the blood is released.

The body was able to metabolize the ethanol at a rate three times faster than waiting for the liver to process it. Fisher cautions that the sample is small and requires further testing.

But the peer-reviewed developmen­ts are nonetheles­s promising.

“I used to be an emergency doc and I know they have big issues with patients who – on top of everything else – are also alcohol-intoxicate­d,” said Fisher, adding that it could also save the lives of young children who accidental­ly ingest alcohol. “Usually those kids are down for the count but this may be an approach.”

The treatment is unlikely to be repackaged as a cure for hangovers: researcher­s found that the process was most effective for high levels of intoxicati­on.

 ?? Theesungne­rn/Alamy ?? Three million people around the world diefrom alcohol-related deaths each year and emergency room physicians have few effective tools to treat acute alcohol poisoning. Photograph: sumetee
Theesungne­rn/Alamy Three million people around the world diefrom alcohol-related deaths each year and emergency room physicians have few effective tools to treat acute alcohol poisoning. Photograph: sumetee

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