There’s a belief that drinking more alcohol when you’re already hungover can cure you of some rough symptoms.
The tactic seemingly stems from the medieval theory that the source of an ailment could also be the remedy for it.a><
This thought eventually led to the expression “the hair of the dog that bit you,” which resulted in the development of fur-filled tonics from suspected rabid dogs in hopes of preventing rabies infections in humans, according to Lexico, an online dictionary powered by the Oxford University Press.
"Hair of the dog" is an expression that’s become associated with post-hangover drinking.
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While the questionable tonics didn’t work and fell out of favor with the rise of modern medicine, the “hair of the dog” expression has stuck around, and it has even become associated with drinks” target=”_blank”>drinking<
The government agency’s brochure states that drinking alcohol while hungover “might temporarily minimize some symptoms” — but “it could contribute to and prolong the malaise and other symptoms of the hangover.”
If you’re trying to find an actual hangover cure, you’re sadly out of luck, according to the NIAAA, which is a part of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
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“The only way to completely avoid a hangover is to not drink alcohol at all or to keep alcohol intake to a minimum,” the NIAAA’s brochure said.
“There is no cure for a hangover other than time.”
Are there better options than ‘hair of the dog’?
A 2017 news release from the Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in North Carolina, which was published in Science Daily, said the hair of the dog theory for alcohol consumption has no scientific evidence to back it up.
“It will, at best, postpone” a hangover, said Laura Veach, who’s a doctoral degree holder in substance counseling, in a statement.
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“Taking a drink the morning after may temporarily make you feel better because you’re putting alcohol back into the system,” she said.
“But it doesn’t cure the hangover; it just sort of tricks you by masking the symptoms. They’re going to show up eventually.”
Health experts recommend alcohol avoidance once a hangover has begun.
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Hangover symptoms reportedly occur when blood alcohol content drops to zero; symptoms can include undesirable results such as headache, thirst, fatigue, dizziness, nausea and poor mood, according to the Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center.
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For hangover treatment, Veach recommends rest, hydration, acetylsalicylic acid painkillers and caffeine avoidance.