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David Baxter PhD

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Researchers warn mixing alcohol with diet drinks boosts intoxication
by Paul Taylor, The Globe and Mail
February 5, 2013

Many people use diet drinks as mixers with alcohol because they want avoid the calories associated with sugary beverages. But a new study suggests there is a unintended consequence of opting for a diet mixer ? greater intoxication.

?I think no one has any idea that this is the case,? said Cecile Marczinski, the lead researcher and professor of psychology at Northern Kentucky University.

Even the researchers were surprised that substituting a sugary beverage with a diet drink boosts the blood-alcohol level by such a big extent ? 18 per cent.

In has long been known that consuming food will slow the passage of alcohol from the stomach into the lower intestine where it is absorbed into the bloodstream. In a similar fashion, sugar in the form of a drink will act like a food and slow the absorption of alcohol.

But with a low-calorie diet beverage, there is little to hinder the movement of alcohol through the gastrointestinal tract, leading to a relatively quick spike in blood alcohol levels.

For the study, the researchers recruited 16 volunteers ? eight males and eight females. Each participant came into the research centre on three separate days. On one occasion, they were given vodka with a diet beverage. (The number of drinks they received ? totalling either three or four ounces of alcohol ? depended on their body weight.) On another occasion, they got vodka with a surgery drink. And one time they were served a non-alcoholic placebo.

?The drinks ? all three to four of them ? were consumed within 10 minutes. This methodology allows the blood alcohol to peak and decline quickly so that the subjects can leave the laboratory in about five hours,? Marczinski said.

The results revealed that the vodka and the regular mix produced an average blood-alcohol concentration of .077 per cent among the study participants. When the diet beverage was used, their average blood-alcohol level shot up to .091. That represents an increase of 18 per cent. But more important, it pushed them over .08 ? the legal limit for driving.

?When you consume alcohol with a diet drink, then just be aware of the fact this is going to increase your blood-alcohol concentration and you need to be careful,? Marczinski said.

This isn?t the first time that a study has hinted that diet beverages could pose an intoxication hazard. For almost a decade, Dennis Thombs at the University of North Texas Health Science Center has been conducting random tests of patrons leaving bars and nightclubs. His tests have often found that people who consumed alcohol with a diet drink tended to have significantly higher alcohol levels than those using a regular mix.

Marczinski?s new study, which will be published in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research, went a step further by doing the measurements in a lab, where the effects of different mixes could be rigorously compared and quantified.

While conducting his research, Thombs also noticed that females tend be the ones who specifically order diet mixes.

?I am assuming that women are somewhat more weight conscious than men, so they are trying to reduce their caloric intake when they are out at a bar or nightclub drinking,? Thombs said. ?But they are probably unaware that this is creating a situation where they are going to become perhaps more intoxicated than they intended.?

Marczinski agrees with Thombs? assessment. ?Women, especially, are really conscious of calories,? she said. ?But it is far more harmful to your brain and your liver to have a higher blood alcohol concentration as opposed to a couple of extra calories in a drink.?

Thombs believes the public should be made aware of the potential risk of mixing alcohol with diet beverages. But he is also concerned that a public education campaign could be counterproductive. ?Some people could use this information not to protect themselves, but to get themselves more intoxicated.?

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eva

MVP
This is a really interesting article. I never would have thought that using diet sodas in mixed drinks would increase the effects of the alcohol!

I used to serve drinks at my work, so from a practical point of view, though, alcohol intake should be avoided or reduced in the first place if someone is conscious about their weight and wants to lose some. :p The sugar in mixed drinks is actually important to both the taste (seriously, hard liquors mixed with aspartame sounds kinda gross), and the metabolizing. Sugar is easier to work through your system, so using diet alternatives isn`t worth it.
 

W00BY

MVP, Forum Supporter
MVP
I have a school friend that once he finished his PHD in biochemistry went off to synthesize proteins for the American government (I still to this day do not have a clue what this actually means) and the first time he came back home he urged me not to drink diet drinks

His personal opinion was that aspartame and aphesulfam-k (or however you spell it) both built up a toxicity in the brain that cause it to produce within the brain it's self what he referred to as formaldehyde after that he the went on to tell me not to use spread and to use butter as any health damage that butter did was far outweighed by the perils of hydrogenated and emulsified products.

I have always tried to stick to this however it is getting harder and harder with regard to drinks as even supposed non-diet versions have now been infiltrated with these chemicals as companies now are desperate to claim their products are less calorie laden than others.

I also have a kidney condition that means I need to avoid these chemicals

I think it has been known for sometime the dangers of diet drinks on areas of the body particularly the brain... the food industry just doesn't want anyone dwelling on it too long.

I prefer a nice glass of water anyway

Cheers!
 
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