Wednesday 12 September 2012

Alcohol Part 2 - Rumours & Misconceptions

Part 2 is a conclusion to the short series on alcohol and a quick look at some of the most common rumours/misconceptions that get thrown around when it comes to drinking.


Testosterone levels
Alcohol is portrayed by the fitness industry as a demonic substance that will immediately have huge negative effects on your training if a drop of the stuff is touched. A lot of this is due to the negative effect on testosterone that is said to happen when alcohol is drank. However this is not the case, a study conducted found that a small dosage of alcohol (1) produced a small increase in testosterone over placebo subjects. Also in a study done on moderate drinkers, (30-40g alcohol/day, or about 4-5 drinks) over 3 weeks the reduction in testosterone for the males was only 6.8% (2), for females there was no effect. This is from drinking every day for a long period of time, it goes very much against the portrayal of alcohol as a testosterone destroying substance.

Training recovery
Similar to the rumours portrayed about testosterone, alcohol is also said to greatly impair training recovery. There is very little evidence to support that normal amounts of drinking combined with normal levels (not excessive/overtraining) of training have any correlation with decreased performance levels (3).The findings of studies mostly acknowledge that recovery and the protein synthesis that accompanies it is only greatly effected by chronic drinking (4), although it is known to have a minute effect on protein synthesis when consumed regardless.

Eating before drinking
Many times before you go out your parents will tell you to eat something or drink some milk to line your stomach so you don't get as drunk. When alcohol is ingested, 80% of it is diffused in the small intestine directly into the blood stream (normal food needs to be digested first before it can do this, bear in mind only 10% of digestion occurs in the stomach). When you have food lying in your stomach the valve at the bottom of your stomach closes which stops the flow of alcohol into the intestine (5). What this does is greatly delay the rate of intoxication, but every drop of alcohol still needs to be processed and detoxified. The negative effect of this being, when combined with the university culture of getting off your face drunk, you usually end up drinking more to make up for the slower absorption which will not only lead to a bigger hangover but also more stress on the liver!

Real men drink beer!
It's a common thing amongst British men to be chastised if you're not drinking beer, there's also a great correlation between levels of above average body fat and beer drinkers. This is simply because beer contains many empty calories, as do alcopops, cider, nondiet mixers. Bear in mind the previous article that went into the metabolism of alcohol when looking at total calorie values, carbohydrates are 4kcal per g.

Let's take a quick look (6) -

Regular Beer – 13g carbs – 146 calories (52 carb)
Light Beer – 5g carbs – 100 calories (20 carb)
Cider – 27g carbs – 200 calories (108 carb)
Bacardi Breezer – 39g carbs – 220 calories (156 carb)
Diet Barcardi Breezer – 3g carbs – 96 calories (12 carb)
200ml coke+25ml vodka – 20g carbs – 135 calories (80 carb)
200ml diet coke+25 ml vodka – 0g carbs – 55 calories (0 carb)

It's easy to see how many calories you could be consuming over the course of the night just from drinking full sugar beer/mixers/alcopops, stick to diet/light. Contrary to popular belief your testicles won't shrink, but your gut probably will!




1. Pubmed (2003) Testosterone increases in men after a low dose of alcohol. [Online]. Available at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12711931

2. Pubmed (2004) Effect of moderate alcohol consumption on plasma dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, testosterone, and estradiol levels in middle-aged men and postmenopausal women: a diet-controlled intervention study. [Online]. Available at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15166654

3. Vella, L.D, Cameron-Smith, D. (2010) Alcohol, Athletic Performance and Recovery. Nutrients. [Online]. Available at http://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/2/8/781/htm

4. APS (1998) Inhibition of muscle protein synthesis by alcohol is associated with modulation of eIF2B and eIF4E [Online]. Available at http://ajpendo.physiology.org/content/277/2/E268.full

5. VirginiaTech (2012) Alcohol's Effects, Factors that Effect Intoxication.[Online]. Available at http://www.alcohol.vt.edu/students/alcoholeffects/intoxfactors.htm

6. Superskinnyme.com (2012) Calories in Beer. [Online]. Available at http://www.superskinnyme.com/calories-in-beer.html

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