Abstract

Consumption of food while drinking alcohol has been suggested to play important roles in alleviating the physiological and pharmacological influences of alcohol. Vegetables are believed to provide health benefits, but there is little evidence for their influence on the effects of alcohol consumption. The present study aimed to investigate the effect of a common vegetable, tomato, on alcohol metabolism. In a randomized, controlled, crossover study with12 Japanese healthy men aged between 24 and 56 years, drinking tomato juice containing 5% (v/v) alcohol (TJAlc) significantly attenuated the elevation of blood ethanol level and subsequently increased the level of acetate compared with a water-based alcoholic beverage with an equal dose of alcohol (0.4 g/kg body weight). Significantly higher levels of blood pyruvate and lactate were also observed in subjects who had consumed TJAlc compared with those consuming the water-based beverage. Additionally, a biphasic alcohol effects scale method showed that subjective feelings for alcohol-induced stimulant effects were significantly enhanced by drinking TJAlc. Animal experiments using male Sprague Dawleyrats suggested that the effect on blood biomarkers was attributable to the serum fraction of tomato (TS), which largely consisted of aqueous compounds, but not lipophilic compounds such as the carotenoid lycopene. Furthermore, it was suggested the TS possibly included potent compound(s) in addition to alanine, glutamine, and citric acid, all of which have previously been reported to affect alcohol metabolism. Administration of TS clearly increased the activity of NAD (H)-dependent enzymes such as lactate-(LDH), alcohol-, and aldehyde-dehydrogenase in rat liver cytosols. These findings suggest that aqueous compound(s) in tomato promote alcohol metabolism, probably through increasing pyruvate level, enhancing LDH activity, and improving the ratio of NAD to NADH.

Highlights

  • Moderate consumption of ethanol is widely believed to have beneficial effects for human health, whereas high consumption causes many serious medical problems [1] [2]

  • It is still difficult to regulate alcohol metabolism, because it is governed by a broad array of environmental factors including genetic and physiological differences in individuals [4] [5], and drinking conditions such as the type of alcoholic beverage, the amount of alcohol consumed, and foods taken with alcohol [6]

  • As reported in 1925 [7], food intake while drinking alcohol has been suggested to alleviate the increase of blood ethanol, a phenomenon that is possibly mediated by distinct mechanisms such as promotion of first-pass metabolism (FPM) in digestive organs and up-regulation of alcohol metabolism in the liver

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Summary

Introduction

Moderate consumption of ethanol is widely believed to have beneficial effects for human health, whereas high consumption causes many serious medical problems [1] [2]. As reported in 1925 [7], food intake while drinking alcohol has been suggested to alleviate the increase of blood ethanol, a phenomenon that is possibly mediated by distinct mechanisms such as promotion of first-pass metabolism (FPM) in digestive organs and up-regulation of alcohol metabolism in the liver. For the former, a human study recently demonstrated that FPM was up-regulated by taking foods with alcohol [8]. Despite of a lack of scientific evidence on the beneficial effects of food consumption with alcohol, certain foods have traditionally been consumed while drinking alcohol, a practice that can be observed in many cultures throughout the world

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