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  • Ugh, your head hurts,

  • you're nauseated, you're achy,

  • and you are certainly never drinking again.

  • The only thought running through your foggy mind is,

  • "Why are hangovers the absolute worst?"

  • Let's go back to last night.

  • As you down that cocktail, alcohol migrates

  • through your GI tract to your liver,

  • where enzymes break it down.

  • But as you continue to drink, your liver can't keep up.

  • So the alcohol overflows into your bloodstream

  • and travels to other organs like your brain.

  • There, it suppresses a hormone called vasopressin.

  • Normally, vasopressin prevents you from urinating too much.

  • So without it, you have to pee all the time,

  • dehydrating you in the process,

  • and that helps explain your brutal headache

  • the next morning.

  • But there are other chemicals at work,

  • such as proinflammatory cytokines.

  • These are small proteins that stimulate inflammation,

  • which causes symptoms like nausea, jitters, and headaches.

  • And people who are hungover

  • have tons of them in their blood.

  • In fact, when researchers injected proinflammatory cytokines

  • into people who were stone-cold sober,

  • they actually felt hungover without all the fun beforehand.

  • What a rip-off.

  • Now, scientists aren't exactly sure why binging

  • triggers this kind of inflammatory response,

  • but there is some evidence that it's more severe

  • when you drink darker alcohols.

  • In one study, participants who drank bourbon

  • instead of vodka reported that their hangover symptoms

  • were 36% worse the next morning.

  • Then, there's that awful morning anxiety called "hangxiety."

  • And no, it's not the guilt that you feel

  • from all the bad decisions you made the night before.

  • It's actually biological.

  • Hangxiety starts to develop when you finally put down

  • that last empty cocktail glass.

  • You see, up until that point, your brain

  • has been ramping up the activity of receptors

  • called G-A-B-A, giving you that calming buzz.

  • And at the same time, it's been blocking glutamate,

  • a stimulant linked to anxiety.

  • But when you stop drinking,

  • that whole system flips right around.

  • Your brain empties those calming G-A-B-A receptors

  • and floods with stimulating glutamate,

  • which can make you feel abnormally anxious

  • by the time morning comes around.

  • It can also disrupt your sleep so you wake up still tired.

  • But enough with all that bad news.

  • You want to know how you can make

  • that nasty hangover a thing of the past.

  • Sorry to say, but that delicious, greasy breakfast

  • isn't doing you any favors.

  • Your body is running low on water, not fat.

  • So your best bet is to hydrate

  • and take an anti-inflammatory.

  • Chances are the hangover will vanish within 24 hours

  • or at least in time for next weekend.

  • Uh, hello, my good friend?

  • Yes, I'd love to go to the big party,

  • and I will be drinking a lot of alcohol as well.

Ugh, your head hurts,

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