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It's hard to calculate how much you are drinking
but you
should know
The festive season is a testing time, and those who
wish to drink sensibly might use the "unit of alcohol" The discerning drinker could calculate the dose of ethanol in a drink
knowing its volume and ethanol concentration. However, even the sober
can find this difficult. Firstly, there are several ways of defining
concentration. It is expressed as percentage ethanol by volume (% v/v)
in Europe and as percentage proof in the United States, where 100%
proof is 50% v/v (in England 100% proof was 57% v/v). The density of
ethanol is 0.79 g/ml at room temperature, so, for example, 100 ml of
ethanol 10% v/v contains almost 8 g of ethanol. Secondly,
concentration can differ widely among apparently similar drinks. The
strengths of beers range from about 3.4% to 9% v/v; white wine from
8% to 13% v/v; and spirits from 37.5% v/v for mass market vodka to
57.3% v/v for cask strength Laphroaig. Subjective impressions of
alcoholic strength are fallible.1
Establishing the volume of a drink can also be hard. In the
United Kingdom a single pub measure of spirits is now 25 ml (it was
1/6th gill (1/24th pint) in England and 1/4 gill in Scotland). A half
pint of beer is 284 ml. Bottles and cans of beer hold anything from 250 to 500 ml. A glass of wine in a pub contains 175 ml, but the large
tulip glasses seen in fashionable restaurants contain twice that much.
A small bottle of weak beer could contain 8 g of ethanol and a large
can of strong beer 35 g; a pub glass of thin Rhine wine might
contain 11 g, and your host's generous glass of Pouilly Fuissé
nearly 40 g. In the United States a standard drink is 12 ounces of
beer, 5 ounces of wine, or 1.5 ounces of 80 proof distilled
spirits (an American ounce being 29.6 ml). American and British
units therefore differ substantially, which makes it hard to compare
epidemiological studies.
The relation between dose and the resulting concentration in blood is
also very variable. It depends on the rates of absorption and
elimination and the volume of distribution (the ratio between total
amount in the body and blood concentration). The volume of distribution
can be estimated from age, sex, height, and weight,2 but
the other variables are harder to define. It is correspondingly hard to
predict what dose is likely to raise the blood ethanol concentration
above the statutory limit for driving (80 mg/100 ml in the United
Kingdom, 50 mg/100 ml in many other countries, and 20 mg/100 ml in a
few).
a glass of
wine or beer or a single measure of spirits
as a yardstick. But what is a unit, and how many is it safe to drink?

View larger version (19K):
[in a new window]
The dose of ethanol (g) versus ethanol concentration (% by volume) for
different volumes of drink
What effects might ethanol have? Acutely, it depresses the central
nervous system and can also precipitate cardiac arrhythmia. Modest
concentrations depress inhibitory neurons
turning the introvert into a
garrulous exhibitionist. Higher concentrations impair cerebellar function
causing slurred speech, poor hand-eye coordination, and unsteadiness. Subsequently, sensation, consciousness, and then brainstem functions are depressed. The effects on cerebellar function, seen increasingly as concentrations exceed about 35 mg/100 ml, are
important. Admiral Jellicoe noted that "by careful and prolonged tests, the shooting efficiency of the men was proved to be 30% worse
after the rum ration than before"3 (the rum ration was 1/8th pint
about 70 ml). The apparent effects of a given blood ethanol
concentration, however, vary greatly among individuals. In some cases
500 mg/100 ml can be lethal, while in others much higher concentrations
may cause few signs: a woman with a serum ethanol concentration of 1510 mg/100 ml (20 times the UK legal limit) was alert and responsive to
questions.4
Advice to limit ethanol consumption to a specified number of units per week implies a threshold dose below which ethanol is harmless. Indeed, "the strong negative association between ischaemic heart disease deaths and . . . wine consumption" in developed countries encouraged the hope that moderate drinking might be beneficial.5 Several prospective studies, including one of British doctors,6 show a J or U shaped relation between coronary heart disease mortality and ethanol intake.7 Total mortality, though, increases remorselessly with intake above 12-16 g ethanol per day. 6 8 Since the protective effect relates to ischaemic heart disease, those at low risk of this, including premenopausal women, may not benefit even at these levels.
So what should we do? Well, those who will be driving home,
operating machinery, or operating on patients should know what they are
drinking (see figure): even 10 g of ethanol will be enough to exceed
statutory levels in some jurisdictions and could impair performance.
One more sobering thought for Christmas: binge drinking can cause
arryhthmia and sudden death9 West Midlands Centre for Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting,
City Hospital, Birmingham B18 7QH (fernerre{at}bham.ac.uk) Birmingham Health Authority, Birmingham B16 9RG
or, as recently pointed out
by England's chief medical officer,10 lead ultimately to cirrhosis of the liver.
R E Ferner
Jacky Chambers
| 1. |
Langford NJ, Marshall T, Ferner RE.
The lacing defence: double blind study of thresholds for detecting addition of ethanol to drinks.
BMJ
1999;
319:
1610 |
| 2. | Watson PE. Total body water and blood alcohol levels: updating the fundamentals. In: Crow KE, Batt RD, eds. Human metabolism of alcohol. , Vol 1 Boca Raton: CRC Press, 1988:41-55. |
| 3. | Jellicoe JR. Quoted in: Horsely V, Sturge MD. In: Alcohol and the human body. 5th ed. London: Macmillan, 1915:304. |
| 4. | Johnson RA, Noll EC, Rodney WMM. Survival after a serum ethanol concentration of 11/2%. Lancet 1982; ii: 1394. |
| 5. | St Leger AS, Cochrane AL, Moore F. Factors associated with cardiac mortality in developed countries with particular reference to the consumption of wine. Lancet 1979; i: 1017-1020. |
| 6. |
Doll R, Peto R, Hall E, Wheatley K, Gray R.
Mortality in relation to consumption of alcohol: 13 years' observations on male British doctors.
BMJ
1994;
309:
911-918 |
| 7. | Marmot M, Brunner E. Alcohol and cardiovascular disease: the status of the U shaped curve. BMJ 1991; 303: 565-568. |
| 8. |
Thun MJ, Peto R, Lopez AD, Monaco MS, Henley J, Heath CW, et al.
Alcohol consumption and mortality among middle-aged and elderly US adults.
N Engl J Med
1997;
337:
1705-1714 |
| 9. |
Britton A, McKee M.
The relation between alcohol and cardiovascular disease in Eastern Europe.
J Epidemiol Community Health
2000;
54:
328-332 |
| 10. | Chief Medical Officer. On the state of the public health. London: Department of Health, 2001. www.doh.gov.uk/cmo/annualreport2001/livercirrhosis.htm |
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