Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Hangover-Free Alcohol Coming Next

IANS, 23 Sep, 2016 11:42 AM
  • Hangover-Free Alcohol Coming Next
A new version of alcohol that does not come with hangover will be commonplace by 2050, a British professor has claimed.
 
The new type of synthetic alcohol, known as "alcosynth", is designed to mimic the positive effects of alcohol but does not cause a dry mouth, nausea and throbbing head, according to creator professor David Nutt.
 
The Imperial College professor said he had patented around 90 different alcosynth compounds and two of them are now being rigorously tested for widespread use so that by 2050, alcosynth is served at bars.
 
"It will be there alongside the scotch and the gin, they'll dispense the alcosynth into your cocktail and then you'll have the pleasure without damaging your liver and your heart," Nutt told 'The Independent'.
 
"They go very nicely into mojitos. They even go into something as clear as a Tom Collins. One is pretty tasteless, the other has a bitter taste," he added.
 
 
Researching substances that work on the brain in a similar way to alcohol, Nutt and his team have been able to design a drug which they say is non-toxic and replicates the positive effects of alcohol.
 
"We know a lot about the brain science of alcohol; it's become very well understood in the last 30 years. So we know where the good effects of alcohol are mediated in the brain, and can mimic them. And by not touching the bad areas, we don't have the bad effects," Nutt said.
 
He said the effects of alcosynth lasted around a couple of hours - the same as traditional alcohol.
 
Nutt said he and his team had also managed to limit the effects of drinking a lot of alcosynth, so in theory it would be impossible to ever feel too "drunk".
 
The drink is a derivative of benzodiazepine - commonly used to treat anxiety disorder - but does not cause withdrawal symptoms.
 
Although much research has been conducted into alcosynth, it is still several years before it hits bars due to several regulatory clearances required.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

'Thought I Was Going To Die': Richard Branson On Horrific Bike Crash

'Thought I Was Going To Die': Richard Branson On Horrific Bike Crash
Branson was cycling with his two children on the British Virgin Islands when he hit a hump in the road.

'Thought I Was Going To Die': Richard Branson On Horrific Bike Crash

Crafty! Beer-Testing Lab Helps Students Learn Chemistry

Crafty! Beer-Testing Lab Helps Students Learn Chemistry
A Maine professor is hoping to brew interest in her chemistry class by keeping the topic on beer.

Crafty! Beer-Testing Lab Helps Students Learn Chemistry

Revamped Scholarship For Children Of NRIs, Persons of Indian Origin

Revamped Scholarship For Children Of NRIs, Persons of Indian Origin
A revamped scholarship programme for children of NRIs and Persons of Indian Origin to pursue under graduate courses in Indian universities and institutions was on Wednesday announced by Ministry of External Affairs (MEA).

Revamped Scholarship For Children Of NRIs, Persons of Indian Origin

Italian Man Beaten By Ex-wife For Returning Daughter Late

Italian Man Beaten By Ex-wife For Returning Daughter Late
  The 24-year-old woman, her 58-year-old father and 36-year-old boyfriend face charges of assault after they struck the child's father so hard with a piece of wood that it broke.

Italian Man Beaten By Ex-wife For Returning Daughter Late

French Burkini Bans Face Legal Challenge As Tension Mounts

French Burkini Bans Face Legal Challenge As Tension Mounts
Some 30 demonstrators have gathered in London to protest local French bans of the body-covering burkini swimsuit.

French Burkini Bans Face Legal Challenge As Tension Mounts

Surveyed Doctors Want THC In Recreational Marijuana To Be Regulated

Surveyed Doctors Want THC In Recreational Marijuana To Be Regulated
VANCOUVER — The Canadian Medical Association says 72 per cent of doctors who responded to a survey it conducted want the federal government to regulate THC levels in recreational marijuana.

Surveyed Doctors Want THC In Recreational Marijuana To Be Regulated