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© 1998 Medical Council on Alcohol


research-article

URINARY EXCRETION OF METHANOL AND 5-HYDROXYTRYPTOPHOL AS BIOCHEMICAL MARKERS OF RECENT DRINKING IN THE HANGOVER STATE

PREBEN BENDTSEN, A. WAYNE JONES1 and ANDERS HELANDER2,*

Drug Dependence Unit, University Hospital Linkòping, Sweden
1Department of Forensic Toxilogy, University Hospital Linkòping, Sweden
2Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute, St. Görans Hospital Stockholm, Sweden

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed at: Alcohol and Drug Dependence Unit, St Görans Hospital, S-1l2 81 Stockholm, Sweden. This work was presented in part at the 14th International Conference on Alcohol, Drugs and Traffic Safety, Annecy, France, 1997

Received 28 November 1997; first review notified 20 February 1998; accepted 4 March 1998

Twenty healthy social drinkers (9 women and 11 men) drank either 50 g of ethanol (mean intake 0.75 g/kg) or 80 g (mean 1.07 g/kg) according to choice as white wine or export beer in the evening over 2 h with a meal. After the end of drinking, at bedtime, in the following morning after waking-up, and on two further occasions during the morning and early afternoon, breath-alcohol tests were performed and samples of urine were collected for analysis of ethanol and methanol and the 5-hydroxytryptophol (5-HTOL) to 5-hydroxyindol-3-ylacetic acid (5-HIAA) ratio The participants were also asked to quantify the intensity of hangover symptoms (headache, nausea, anxiety, drowsiness, fatigue, muscle aches, vertigo) on a scale from 0 (no symptoms) to 5 (severe symptoms). The first morning urine void collected 6-11 h after bedtime as a rule contained measurable amounts of ethanol, being 0.09 ± 0.03 g/l (mean ± SD) after 50 g and 0.38 ± 0.1 g/l after 80 g ethanol. The corresponding breath-alcohol concentrations were zero, except for three individuals who registered 0.01–0.09 g/l. Ethanol was not measurable in urine samples collected later in the morning and early afternoon. The peak urinary methanol occurred in the first morning void, when the mean concentration after 80 g ethanol was {small tilde} 6-fold higher than pre-drinking values. This compares with a {small tilde} 50-fold increase for the 5-HTOL/5-HIAA ratio in the first morning void. Both methanol and the 5-HTOL/5-HIAA ratio remained elevated above pre-drinking baseline values in the second and sometimes even the third morning voids. Most subjects experienced only mild hangover symptoms after drinking 50 g ethanol (mean score 2.4 ± 2.6), but the scores were significantly higher after drinking 80g (78 ± 7.1). The most common symptoms were headache, drowsiness, and fatigue A highly significant correlation (r = 0.62–0.75, P <0.01) was found between the presence of headache, nausea, and vertigo and the urinary methanol concentration in the first and second morning voids, whereas 5-HTOL/5-HIAA correlated with headache and nausea. These results show that analysing urinary methanol and 5-HTOL furnishes a way to disclose recent drinking after alcohol has no longer been measurable by conventional breath-alcohol tests for at least 5–10 h. The results also support the notion that methanol may be an important factor in the aetiology of hangover.


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