7/4 Posted December 19, 2005 Report Posted December 19, 2005 I try to drink a lot a water before crashing, as it is the dehydration that gives you the nasty headaches. Part of it is also sugar crash - too much insulin. That's why I recomended steak. Quote
Noj Posted December 19, 2005 Report Posted December 19, 2005 Free For All's right, the key is to drink water late at night, while still drunk. Beat the hangover to the punch. Since it's too late, I recommend finding some authentic tortilla soup. Quote
Use3D Posted December 19, 2005 Report Posted December 19, 2005 Fast metabolism is my cure. I've never been hungover, and I recently killed a fifth of gin with my roommate in one evening. Quote
sal Posted December 19, 2005 Report Posted December 19, 2005 Menudo. Not the band, the Mexican dish. Quote
spinlps Posted December 19, 2005 Report Posted December 19, 2005 Tylenol with Coke / Pepsi chaser before bed. Otherwise, it's plenty of fluids and a multivitamin the next day. A nice vigorous game of basketball does the trick as well... if you don't sweat it off, it'll end up coming out of one end or the other. Quote
frank m Posted December 19, 2005 Report Posted December 19, 2005 According to the late great Mr. Benchley, the only cure for a real hangover is death. Quote
Rosco Posted December 19, 2005 Author Report Posted December 19, 2005 A nice vigorous game of basketball does the trick You have got to be kidding me! Quote
Rosco Posted December 19, 2005 Author Report Posted December 19, 2005 According to the late great Mr. Benchley, the only cure for a real hangover is death. I felt that was close earlier... Quote
chris olivarez Posted December 19, 2005 Report Posted December 19, 2005 Menudo. Not the band, the Mexican dish. This has worked for me too though I suspect that he probably can't get it in his neck of the woods. Other than that I recommend three ibiprofen(sp) and non alcoholic fluid. Quote
Free For All Posted December 19, 2005 Report Posted December 19, 2005 the Mexican dish. Works for me. Quote
Brownian Motion Posted December 19, 2005 Report Posted December 19, 2005 Tylenol with Coke / Pepsi chaser before bed. Coke won't hurt you, but Tylenol can destroy your liver. Be careful. Quote
Rosco Posted December 19, 2005 Author Report Posted December 19, 2005 the Mexican dish. Works for me. Me too! Quote
Harold_Z Posted December 20, 2005 Report Posted December 20, 2005 Fast metabolism is my cure. I've never been hungover, and I recently killed a fifth of gin with my roommate in one evening. Amateur. Quote
7/4 Posted December 20, 2005 Report Posted December 20, 2005 Fast metabolism is my cure. I've never been hungover, and I recently killed a fifth of gin with my roommate in one evening. Amateur. Must be younger than 26. Quote
catesta Posted December 20, 2005 Report Posted December 20, 2005 Image courtesy of hardbopjazz. (it's his avatar) Quote
spinlps Posted December 20, 2005 Report Posted December 20, 2005 Well... it worked in college. Of course, job, marriage, family, etc... have limited hangover opps. A nice vigorous game of basketball does the trick You have got to be kidding me! Quote
randissimo Posted December 20, 2005 Report Posted December 20, 2005 Your body loses lots of Vitamin B when drinking, so take lots of that to help with further cravings. Niacinamide is the pure form of Vitamin B3, and though it gives you a "flush" (blood that is) I found it killed the craving/hair of the dog part. So if you dose up on the B3, the pain goes away? No wonder the big O sounds so good. Quote
Brownian Motion Posted January 1, 2006 Report Posted January 1, 2006 The New York Times January 1, 2006 Hangover Helpers: Beyond Sheep Eyes By ALEX WILLIAMS THE last time Nan Anane, a graphic designer in San Francisco, had one beer too many during a night out with friends, his first stop the next morning was to his local Mexican taqueria, where he ordered tostadas made with ceviche, uncooked fish cured with citrus juice. "It really brings me back from that headache and bodyache," he said. "Something about near-raw fish really breathes life back into you." Outer Mongolians are said to have feasted on pickled sheep eyeballs in tomato juice. Cattle ropers in the Old West supposedly sipped tea brewed from rabbit dung. Russians have been known to drip vodka over fatty sausage into a tumbler and then drink it. Long before the ancient Egyptians started raising a beer in honor of the god Osiris, human beings have been in search of hangover relief, and this morning, as people wake up groggy from yet another New Year's Eve, there will be dozens of cures to choose from that go far beyond the traditional Alka-Seltzer. The Internet has made it possible for anyone to share secret cures, including waffle sandwiches, Pedialyte Freezer Pops and coffee enemas. It has also allowed small-time herbalists and vitamin distributors to market a panoply of packaged remedies trumpeting ingredients like artichoke extract, sarsaparilla root and prickly pear. There's even something called the Wasabi Hangover Bath Treatment concocted from Epsom salts and organic mustard, intended to help you sweat out the toxins. Though there has been limited medical research into the effectiveness of such cures, the explosion of new products prompted British and Dutch researchers to review the research on popular folk remedies and hangover products. The results, published in late December in BMJ, the British medical journal, found that "no compelling evidence exists to suggest that any conventional or complementary intervention is effective for preventing or treating alcohol hangover" (although the researchers noted "encouraging findings" for borage, a yeast product, and tolfenamic acid, a painkiller). Foggy heads, however, are ill equipped to process hard scientific data, and most overindulgers faced with the nausea and wobbly knees that often follow an epic bender will simply do what they and their forebears have always done: cobble together a regimen of tried-and-perhaps-true home remedies, usually heavy on fatty foods, salt and blind faith. No dubious news reports will shake their devotion to the beloved and highly specific miracle cure of their own design - say, pizza followed by a shot of the bitter spirit Fernet-Branca, a ginger ale, a multivitamin and two Advils, the preferred tonic of Michelle Idziorek, 33, a technical recruiter in San Francisco. "I think eating anything that will absorb the alcohol is a good choice," she explained. "But I just can't seem to get my friends to eat some healthy whole wheat toast when we're all really drunk." Frank Kelly Rich, the editor of Modern Drunkard, a monthly humor magazine in Denver, said that during his years as an Army Ranger in the early 1980's he used to hit up the medics for intravenous saline drips, which, he maintains, brought an instant revival of energy. Since then, he said, he has turned to Propel Fitness Water, explaining, "It has lots of B vitamins and goes down easier than water." Some hangover remedies involve multiple and specific steps. Casey Cunniffe, 35, a production manager at Time Warner Inc., who lives in Norwalk, Conn., usually ends a night of indulgence with a fried egg sandwich, then wakes up to a vanilla milkshake - and a glass of beer mixed with 7-Up for acute cases, he said. "The hair of the dog thing works, as long as you're not going anywhere," Mr. Cunniffe said. "The milkshake helps cool you down." Quaint tales about miracle cures available in the refrigerator have survived into the age of nanotechnology in part because even physicians cannot agree on what precisely causes a hangover, said Dr. Jason D. Rosenberg, the director of the headache clinic at Johns Hopkins University. The symptoms are familiar enough: headache, nausea and grogginess. Most authorities, he said, agree that they seem to be caused by a combination of factors resulting from intoxication by alcohol, including dehydration, dilation of blood vessels around the brain, changes in certain chemical levels in the body and alteration of the sleep cycle. But no one knows exactly how large a role each of those causes plays, which means that no one knows exactly how to treat them, Dr. Rosenberg said. Besides, he added, certain aspects of the art of hangover management actually do have some basis in science. Salty food, for instance, is not a bad idea, nor are sugary drinks. "You need water and salt to stay hydrated," he said. "But I wouldn't go drinking seawater." The electrolytes - salts - in sports drinks like Gatorade can be helpful, he said. Other favored hangover balms, however, would seem worthless, he said. Eggs, which many sufferers swear by, are high in protein and cholesterol, but neither of those seems to have anything to do with hangovers. Spicy food will do nothing more "than make your breath smell really interesting," Dr. Rosenberg added. As for the raw fish Mr. Anante relies on, it is of no apparent value, "unless you're a really drunk polar bear." Hair of the dog, meanwhile, only prolongs dehydration and replenishes the body with toxins. As for fatty foods, they're "a mistake, because the liver can't process all of these things at once," said Dr. Marc K. Siegel, an internist at New York University Medical School. "You're bombarding your liver with a toxin, then bombarding it with fat." To him the best bet is a cup of coffee, a dash of Mylanta and a lot of water. "It's not sexy," Dr. Siegel said. "But those things work." As for the number of new hangover products on the market, many are made by small companies and marketed primarily through the Internet, said Mark Blumenthal, the executive director of the American Botanical Council, a nonprofit organization in Austin, Tex., devoted to education on herbal medicines. According to the British study, many of those herbal remedies have not undergone rigorous medical testing. Mike Pearson, a programmer for an aerospace firm in Los Angeles, took matters into his own hands in 2003 with a Web site called www.hangoverreview.com. On the site he and his friends started trying out the handful of commercial remedies then available. Since then, Mr. Pearson said, so many new hangover remedies have entered the market that he has a hard time keeping up. "Since the hangover cure market popped," he wrote in an e-mail message, "almost all vitamin manufacturers have added some kind of hangover cure to their list."He said many cures could have some value simply because "the basic principle of providing more of the vitamins your body needs to process alcohol is probably going to help to some degree." While doctors uniformly agree that the only real cure for a hangover is abstaining from alcohol altogether, some concede that the best folk remedies for those who succumb to temptation may be any of them, that is, whatever the individual thinks will work. Edward L. Burlingame, a retired publishing executive who lives in Westchester County, said he has relied on the same morning-after remedy - a dire brew of beef consommé, Worcestershire sauce and vodka known as a bull shot - for years but allows that faith might be its most potent ingredient. "There's the truth, and there's the larger truth," he said. "The truth is it probably doesn't work. The larger truth is that if you think it does, it makes all the difference." Or, in Dr. Rosenberg's words, "If someone thinks something is going to work, they're usually going to get better." There is another school of thought, however. As Christopher Israel, the general manager of the Ginger Man, a bar on East 36th Street, said, perhaps the best way to deal with a hangover is the most time-honored way, prolonged suffering. "I wallow in my hangovers," Mr. Israel explained. "If you don't hangover, you didn't have a good time." Quote
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