Unit 5 Alcohol and Nutrition
Unit 5 Alcohol and Nutrition
Rolfes SR, Pinna K & Whitney E. 2015. Understanding Normal and Clinical Nutrition.
10th ed. USA: Wadsworth.
Sizer F & Whitney E. 2011. Nutrition Concepts and Controversies. 12th ed. USA:
Wadsworth: 95.
1. INTRODUCTION
The term “moderation” is important when describing alcohol use. How many drinks
constitute moderate use, and how much is a drink? One drink = any alcoholic
beverage that delivers 15ml of pure ethanol:
150ml wine (depending on alcohol content, dry wines generally contain more
alcohol than sweet wines)
360ml regular beer
45ml distilled liquor
An accepted definition of “moderate drinking” is two drinks per day for men, and
one drink per day for women. This is a maximum per day, and not an average
amount. You cannot abstain during the week, and on Saturday have your whole
week’s allowance at once!
3. ALCOHOL IN THE GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT (Rolfes et al., 2015:222)
Unlike food, alcohol needs no digestion and some is quickly absorbed across
the walls of an empty stomach - this is why a person can feel the effects of
alcohol within a short period of time, as it reaches the brain in a few minutes
Most of the alcohol will still be absorbed in the small intestine
When the stomach contains food, alcohol will be absorbed slower
The stomach begins to break down alcohol with its enzyme, alcohol
dehydrogenase
Women produce less of this enzyme than men; consequently more alcohol
reaches the intestine for absorption into the bloodstream, and is one of the
reasons why women have a smaller allowance for alcohol
Alcohol gets absorbed and metabolized before most nutrients (it receives
priority treatment)
This ensures a speedy disposal and reflects two facts: alcohol cannot be
stored in the body, and it is potentially toxic
After absorption, the liver cells are the first to receive alcohol-laden blood
Liver cells also produce alcohol dehydrogenase to oxidise alcohol (more than
in the stomach)
The liver clears some of the alcohol out of the blood before it moves on
The liver can process 15ml of ethanol (1 drink) per hour – depending on body
size, previous drinking experience, food intake and general health
The maximum rate of alcohol breakdown is set by the amount of alcohol
dehydrogenase available
6. THE HANGOVER
The hangover sufferer may be dizzy, anxious, depressed and irritable. Symptoms
may continue for an entire day (Insel et al., 2016:132).
6.1 Causes of a hangover
A couple of drinks set in motion many destructive processes in the body. The next
day’s abstinence can reverse them only if the doses taken are moderate, the time
between them is ample, and nutrition is adequate. If not, repeated onslaughts of
alcohol take a toll on the body.
When a pregnant woman drinks during pregnancy, her foetus takes the same
drink within minutes and is defenceless against the effects
This can lead to problems such as Foetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) in the baby
(a pattern of irreversible mental and physical defects that can develop in a
foetus in association with high levels of alcohol consumption during
pregnancy)
Alcohol is directly toxic to skeletal and cardiac muscle, causing weakness and
deterioration
Chronic alcohol use raise blood pressure which can contribute to heart
disease
Alcohol attacks brain cells directly and heavy drinking can result in dementia
Acetaldehyde and associated free radicals adversely affects brain tissues
7.3 CANCER
Alcohol causes disturbances in nutrition. Its kilojoules are all “optional”, and often
overlooked by drinkers. Alcohol also causes direct negative effects on nutrients that
the body needs to function.
Metabolic interactions occur between fat and alcohol in the body – presented
with both fat and alcohol, the body will store fat and rather work on ridding
itself of the toxic alcohol by using it preferentially for energy
Thus, alcohol promotes fat storage, especially in the central abdominal areas
Ethanol yields 29 kilojoules per gram itself, and drink mixers/sweet wines,
etc., often contain a lot of added kilojoules/energy such as sugars
a
O
Alcoholic Drink-Equivalents of Select
n Beverages
e
Drink-
Drink Description Equivalents
16 fl oz at 5% alcohol 1.3
12 fl oz at 7% alcohol 1.4
12 fl oz at 9% alcohol 1.8
Wine
Distilled spirits
(reference beverage)
9. RECOMMENDATIONS