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How Alcohol Affects Us
UNDERSTANDING THE PHARMACOLOGY OF
ETHANOL
By Dr. David Benjamin, Clinical Pharmacologist and Toxicologist
Basic Pharmacology of
Ethanol
Ethyl alcohol (ethanol, ETOH)
or just alcohol has been described as the "perfect"
drug. It is soluble in water, the major constituent of
all bodily fluids and tissues, not charged, a small molecule
and not subject to changes in molecular structure as a
result of changes in the acidity (pH) of the body fluids.
Because ETOH is uncharged, it is also soluble in fatty
substances (i.e., lipids) and passes easily through the
lipid membrane barriers in the body (e.g., from the stomach
into the blood or from the intestines into the blood).
Ethanol, like all drugs undergoes
four scientific or pharmacokinetic processes in the body:
These four processes occur
contemporaneously until (1) all the alcohol is absorbed
from the GI tract, and there is no more absorption phase,
and (2) all the alcohol has been metabolized, and there
is no more metabolism of ETOH and it is no longer detectable
in the blood.
In order to simplify the
pharmacokinetic model, many authors refer to a "plateau"
phase instead of a "peak" blood level, a diffusion-equilibrium
phase instead of a distribution phase, and an elimination
phase which combines the processes of metabolism and excretion.
Absorption
Absorption is the process
by which alcohol is made available to the fluids of distribution
of the body (e.g., blood, plasma, serum, aqueous humor,
lymph, etc.). Approximately 80% of orally ingested ETOH
is absorbed from the small intestines, and the remainder
is absorbed from the stomach.
In the fasting state, the
majority of alcohol (i.e., >50%) will be absorbed within
15 minutes and a "peak" or maximum blood level
will occur in approximately 20 minutes, with 80-90% complete
absorption achieved within 30-60 minutes.
The RATE of absorption of
alcohol and subsequent appearance of alcohol in the blood
is dependent on the following factors:
- The rate of consumption (Chugging
vs. sipping),
- The volume consumed (1 shot, ~1.25
oz. vs. a 12 oz. beer),
- The concentration or proof of ethanol
(ETOH) in the drink(Beer = ~3.5%, wine = ~12%, whiskey
= ~43% or 86 proof),
- The presence or absence of carbonation
(e.g., champagne vs. wine, or scotch and soda vs.
scotch and water, carbonation increases the rate of
absorption, but absorption of alcohol from beer is
delayed).
- The presence or absence of food in
the stomach (Food delays absorption).
- Is the person taking any medication(s)
that can interfere with gastrointestinal (GI) motility
(e.g., Reglan slows, Aluminum antacids slow, drugs
like atropine or scopolamine used for ulcers or "queasy
stomachs" slow GI motility keeping the alcohol
in the stomach slowing absorption, while drugs like
Tagamet, Zantac and Pepcid-AC decrease gastric acid
production increasing the rate of gastricemptying
and increasing the rate of ETOH absorption (see DiPadova,
et al., Effects of Ranitidine on Blood Alcohol Levels
After Ethanol Ingestion. Comparison With Other H-2
Receptor Antagonists. JAMA, Vol. 267: 83-86, Jan.1,
1992).
Distribution
Once a drug has been absorbed
from the stomach and/or intestines (GI Tract) into the
blood, it is circulated to some degree to all areas of
the body to which there is blood flow. This is the process
of distribution.
The police know that the
absorption of alcohol from the GI tract into the blood
and the distribution of alcohol from the blood into the
brain (central nervous system, CNS) takes time. This is
why some jurisdictions have adopted a policy of taking
individuals suspected of DWI to the police station to
conduct a breathalyzer test, rather than doing it at the
site where the citizen is stopped for the alleged infraction.
Citizens are usually made
to wait at least 20 minutes before the "breath test"
is done in order to give any alcohol that could be in
the individual's GI tract sufficient time to be absorbed
into the bloodstream. Distribution of alcohol to the brain
(CNS) would then potentially cause the citizen to exhibit
signs or symptoms of impairment and the citizen would
be more likely to fail a field sobriety test at the "station"
rather than at the site where he/she was stopped for the
alleged infraction.
Metabolism
Alcohol in the blood and
tissues must be inactivated and excreted from the body.
This process is initiated by altering the chemical structure
of the alcohol in such a way as to promote its excretion.
The transformation of the alcohol molecule into a chemically
related substance that is more easily excreted from the
body is called metabolism or detoxification.
In the case of ETOH, the
alcohol is metabolized in the liver by the enzyme alcohol
dehydrogenase, to acetaldehyde which causes dilatation
of the blood vessels and, after accumulation, is responsible
for the subsequent hangover which ensues. The acetaldehyde
is subsequently metabolized by the enzyme aldehyde dehydrogenase
to acetate, a substance very similar to acetic acid or
vinegar. In fact, measurement of blood serum acetate levels
may be an indicator of "problem or chronic drinking"
Certain drugs can inhibit
the alcohol dehydrogenase enzyme responsible for the first
step in metabolizing ETOH. Inhibition of this enzyme causes
an increase in the blood alcohol level. Some of these
drugs are probably known to you. Antabuse is used for
the treatment of alcoholism. People taking this drug can
get very sick from ingesting just a small amount of ETOH.
Chloral hydrate is a sleeping pill that when put into
someone's drink is known as a "Mickey Finn".
Some orally administered antidiabetic drugs like Diabinese
also cause an "Antabuse-like" reaction and the
inhalation of the solvent trichloroethylene can also inhibit
alcohol metabolism.
Subjects exposed to these
drugs can ingest 1-2 drinks and have a blood alcohol level
2-3 times higher than one would expect based on classical
prediction models described later in this presentation.
Although these individuals may test "drunk"
on the breathalyzer or by blood alcohol determination,
they may have only ingested one or two alcoholic drinks.
(REALLY!)
Excretion
Excretion is the process
by which a drug is eliminated from the body. In the case
of ETOH, the kidney and lungs excrete only 5-10% of an
absorbed dose of ethanol unchanged (unmetabolized). The
rest must be metabolized prior to excretion.
In order to determine the
rate of excretion of ETOH from blood, one must first be
certain that all the ETOH in the subject's GI tract has
been absorbed. If not, calculation of a rate of excretion
would be confounded be the ongoing absorption of more
ETOH. Once all ETOH has been absorbed, this is called
the post-absorptive, or distributive stage. At this time,
serial (multiple) blood level determinations should show
a decline with time. The slope of the line is indicative
of the rate of excretion.
In most individuals, the
rate of excretion ranges from 0.01% (10 mg/100 ml) to
0.025% (25 mg/100 ml) per hour, with a mean of 0.0175
(frequently rounded off to 0.017 or 0.018).
Note that the units of concentration
are a percent indicating a weight of ETOH dissolved in
a volume of blood. By definition, percent means grams
per 100 ml. However, BAC may also be expressed as mg/100
ml or mg/dl (a "dl" is a deciliter, or 100 ml),
in which case the decimal point on the value expressed
as a percent is moved 3 places to the right, (e.g., 0.025%
= 25 mg/100 ml or 25 mg/dl).
Try to think of percent as
teaspoons of sugar per cup of coffee. A teaspoonful of
sugar weighs approximately 4 grams and 100 ml equals approximately
3.3 ounces of volume or half a cup. Therefore a cup of
coffee 6-7 ounces with two teaspoonfuls of sugar (8 grams)
would have a concentration of approximately 4% sugar (4
grams/100 ml or half cup).
Breathalyzer Testing for
Ethanol
Only air in the deepest portion
of the lungs, the alveolar sacs is in equilibrium
with blood alcohol. Therefore the amount of ETOH in the
lungs of individuals undergoing "breath testing"
is very small and has been estimated at a ratio of 1:2100
to blood. Because this is a general estimate or average
and all people are different, "Breath Tests"
may overestimate BACs.
Quick Estimates of Blood
Alcohol Concentrations
There are some very easy
techniques for estimating blood alcohol concentrations
(BACs). First of all, you should be able to determine
how much alcohol is in a drink. This is accomplished by
obtaining the percent or proof of alcohol in the drink
from the label of the beverage and multiplying that percent
by the volume of the beverage in the drink.
Calculating Percent of
Alcohol in a Beverage
Example: Beer = ~4.2%, Wine
= ~12%, Whiskey = 43% (86 proof),
Vodka could be 80 proof (40%)
or 100 proof (50%), and brandys, rums, malt liquors, and
European or "special calls" can have various
proofs.
Let's start with a Beer:
4.2% is written 0.042. A can of beer is 12 oz.
0.042 x 12 oz. = 0.50 oz.of pure ethanol per can of beer.
One Shot of Whiskey:
43% x one shot, or approximately 1.25 oz.
0.43 x 1.25 oz. = 0.54 oz. of pure alcohol per "shot",
regardless of how much "mixer" is added.
One glass of wine:
12% x 4 oz. (the approximate volume of a wine glass).
0.12 x 4 oz. = 0.48 oz. of pure alcohol per "glass"
of wine.
The "Bottom Line"
is that one can of beer, one glass of wine and one "shot"
of whiskey all have similar alcohol concentrations.
Adjusting Blood Alcohol
Concentrations For Body Weight
Most "estimate"
calculations of BACs are based on an individual weighing
150 lbs.(~70 kg, a kg = 2.2 lbs). However, we all know
that most women weigh less thanthis and most of the men
I know weigh more! But 150 lbs is a standard or basis
towhich we can compare the rest of the population, and
is an acceptable starting place.
The "Rule of Thumb"
is that one mixed drink will produce a peak BAC of approximately
0.02 g/100 ml (same as percent) in a 150 lb. man. For
wine, a littleless, and for beer, still less, because
wine and beer contain less pure alcohol perserving (see
calculations above). If the subject's body weight is greater,
the BAC willbe less, if the subject's body weight is less,
the BAC would be higher (e.g., 0.025- 0.04).
Obviously, there is great
inter-subject variation. If the subject is eating with
thealcohol, the peak BAC would be lower, and shifted to
the right (i.e., take longer to be achieved).
Since the mean (average)
"burnoff" rate is 0.017 per hour, this is the
origin of the "old addage" that you can drink
one drink an hour without getting drunk (actually, without
increasing BAC).
Back Extrapolation
Based on the "burnoff"
rate, one should be able to back-extrapolate from a BACknown
at a certain time to a BAC at an earlier time. This procedure
is based on theassumption that an individual will eliminate
a constant amount of ETOH from his/herblood per unit time.
Since the "burnoff"
rate or elimination rate ranges from 0.01 to 0.025 per
hour, the most valid indicator of prior BACs would be
to construct a "best case" and "worse case"
scenario using both values. You could then be virtually
certain that the "true" value resided within
the range, between the two extremes.
Example:
A man leaves a bar at midnight.
He gets into an automobile accident at 1 am, and at 2
am at the hospital, his blood is drawn. The BAC value
of the blood sample is determined to be 0.12. What were
his BACs at 1 am and at midnight?
Best Case Scenario:
Assume a slow burnoff rate
of 0.01/hr. Then if the BAC were 0.12 at 2 am, it would
have been 0.13 at 1 am and 0.14 at midnight.
Worst Case Scenario:
Assume a fast burnoff rate
of 0.025/hr. Then if the BAC were 0.12 at 2 am, it would
have been 0.145 at 1 am and 0.170at midnight.
Using The Mean Value:
Assume a mean burnoff rate
of 0.0175/hr. Then if the BAC were 0.12 at 2 am, itwould
have been 0.137 at 1 am and 0.155 at midnight.
Actual Value For The Burnoff
Rate:
The only way to know the
subject's actual burnoff rate would be to have obtained
two blood samples at least 30, and preferably 60 minutes
apart and determine thedifference between the two. It
does take two points to determine a straight line!
Correlating BAC With Impairment
A statutory level for the
presumption of DWI is just that, an arbitrary standard.
Any BAC level, whether 0.10% or 0.08%, speaks only to
a legal standard, and not ascientific (physiological)
standard.
If an individual is accustomed
to having 2-3 (or more) alcoholic drinks per day, with
dinner or while watching TV after work, it is quite likely
that they will have developed some tolerance to the intoxicating
properties of alcohol and might not show signs of intoxication
even at BACs over 0.10%. On the other hand, an individual
who drinks infrequently would have developed no tolerance
and might show signs of intoxication at BACs below the
statutory level.
Conversion Of Plasma Or
Serum Levels To BACs
What is serum?
When whole blood (usually obtained from a patient
by venipuncture) is left in a test-tube without an anti-coagulant,
it clots. If you "spin it down" in a cetrifuge,
the clot goes to the bottom of the tube taking all of
the red blood cells and most of the white blood cells
with it. The clear fluid remaining at the top is serum.
What is plasma?
When whole blood is obtained from a patient, and the
blood sample is mixed with an anticoagulant like heparin,
citrate, or oxalate or a chemical that interferes with
clotting like EDTA (more on EDTA) and the red blood cells
are separated by centrifugation, the remaining clear fluid
on top is plasma. Plasma and serum differ in that the
white blood cells are still present in plasma. After centrifugation,
they can be seen as a thin coating on top of the red blood
cells.
When "blood" samples
are drawn in the hospital and subjected to BAC analysis,
it is important to know that analyses conducted on serum
and plasma must be reduced by 16-18% in order to convert
the serum or plasma value to "whole blood" levels,
which are usually the way legal statutes are written.
Why do serum and plasma
levels have to be "corrected" mathematically?
Just think of the old child's tale about the crow who
tried to drink from a pitcher of water while perched on
its edge. When the crow put his beak in the pitcher, the
water level was too low for him to drink. He then obtained
a number of pebbles and dropped them in the pitcher. As
more pebbles were dropped into the pitcher, the water
level rose and eventually, the crow was able to drink
from the pitcher. The red blood cells have the same effect
in blood. They artificially increase the volume of fluid
in whole blood just as putting ice in a glass of water
is likely to cause the water to overflow. Therefore, the
alcohol in plasma and serum alcohol samples are "more
concentrated" than blood because the red blood cells
have been removed and the values must be "corrected"
to represent a value that would have been obtained from
whole blood.
Remember, BAC stands for
Blood Alcohol Concentration, and concentration is described
in percent which is defined as weight per volume. Percent
means part per 100. A 1% solution of any substance contains
1 gram dissolved in 100 ml. For blood alcohol, a 0.10%
level would mean 1/10th of a gram (100 mg) dissolved 100
ml blood.
Just for fun, how sweet
is a cup of coffee? A standard coffee cup probably
holds about 6-8 oz. So 7 is a good estimate. An ounce
equals about 28 ml.So 7 oz. x 28 ml/oz. = 196 or approximately
200 ml. A teaspoonful of sugar weighs about 4 grams. So
1 teaspoonful of sugar = 4 grams/200 ml or 2 gms/100 ml,
2%. If you use two teaspoonfuls of sugar, your coffee
is 4%. If you drink out of a coffee mug, try someone else's
homepage.
More on EDTA
EDTA, the one that got all
the hype in the OJ trial stands for ethylenediamine tetraacetic
acid. The coumpound is used medically (usually as the
disodium salt) as a treatment for poisoning with heavy
metals like lead. A chelating agent binds other molecules.
In a blood collection tube, (see next page) the EDTA binds
calcium ions which have two positive charges (Ca++). Becuase
calcium ions are required for normal clotting to occur,
chelation or binding of calcium inhibits clot formation.
During the OJ trial, people
bagan refering to EDTA as a preservative, which means
that it stops bacteria from growing or living tissue (blood)
from decaying or putrefying. Preservative is a misnomer.
Even EDTA treated blood samples can decompose. A preservative
would be sodium fluoride, fluoride is a metabolic poison,
like cyanide, to humans and human tissues.
The other "anticoagulatnts"
used in various color-topped blood collection tubes are:
heparin, oxalate (calcium binder) and citrate (calcium
binder).
Cross-Examining BACs
Regardless of the source
of the BAC value you are discussing, there will always
be some variability in the procedure used to determine
that particular value. One reason why two readings are
done for the breathalyzer is to demonstrate reliability
and reproducibility of the method.
That is also why there are
"controls" or standards built into the system.
One control is usually a "Blank" (or Air Blank
in Breathalyzers) and contains no alcohol and, of course,
should give a BAC reading of 0.00. The other standard
is called a positive control or calibration test and is
frequently 0.15 or 0.20.
Any BAC level or Breathalyzer
test which was not "run against a blank" and
which did not include a positive control or a series of
positives which described a "standard curve"
are scientifically invalid and should be subject to being
suppressed.
You might also wish to ask
about when the chemical solutions were made up for the
machine. They need to be fresh to be accurate. The last
time the machine was certified for calibration by any
official state or county agency. The qualifications of
the operator.
Statistics
When reviewing BAC results
with three numbers to the right of the decimal point,
make certain to ask about "rounding off". Generally,
in science, any number ending in 5 or greater gets rounded
off up to the next number, while anynumber less 5 is rounded
down. However in fairness to a defendant, the law usually
demands that the last number be dropped and not "rounded
up".
For example by scientific
convention, 0.075 would be rounded off as 0.08, and 0.074
would be rounded off as 0.07, whereas in a court of law,
both 0.074 and 0.075 would both be presented as 0.07.
The sensitivity of the breathalyzer to differentiate between
a BAC of 0.075 and 0.074 is very speculative (unlikely).
For laboratory or breathalyzer
values, ask for the Quality Control and Quality Assurance
data. If there are none, you've made your point, if they
produce them, give them to your expert for review and
analysis. Determine if the hospital's laboratory passed
its last certifying tests, and if those tests were conducted
"blinded" or not. Blinded means the laboratory
did not know the value of the unknown sample.
Ask about the Coefficient
of Variation of the assay. It should be between 5-10%
to be acceptable. If it wasn't calculated, ask them how
they can be certain that the result they're reporting
is a correct result.
Ask about the Standard Deviation
(SD) of the assay, another indicator of variability. For
example, if a result is reported as 0.08 and the SD=+0.002
(read "plus or minus 0.002), then the reported value
has the same probability of being 0.078 as 0.082.
This
article is reproduced here with express permission of
Dr. David Benjamin, Clinical Pharmacologist and Toxicologist.
Dr. Benjamin hold both a Masters degree and a Doctorate
in Pharmacology, and has been practicing over 30 years.
His web site, http://www.doctorbenjamin.com,
has numerous other articles of interest to the person
charged with DUI/DWI (alcohol or drugs).