Energy drink, alcohol not an
invigorating mix
September 21, 2004
This may be sobering news to
some bar patrons, but a study out on Tuesday suggests that mixing alcohol
with an energy drink may not prolong that alcoholic ‘buzz’.
The findings throw cold water on the popular notion that energy drinks, such
as Red Bull, counter the depressive
effects that follow the initial
stimulation produced by alcohol.
The drinks typically consist of carbohydrates, B vitamins, caffeine and
taurine, a derivative of an amino acid found in animal tissue. Some studies
have shown that the beverages, or their main ingredients, may improve mood
and physical performance, but there’s been little research into their
effects when mixed with alcohol.
The new study involved 14 healthy men whose prowess on the stationary bike
was tested after they drank either water, vodka, Red Bull or a mixture of
vodka and Red Bull.
Researchers found that the men’s cycling performance one hour after having
the mixed drink was similar to their performance after alcohol alone.
Dr Maria Lucia O Souza Formigoni and her colleagues at the University of Sao
Paulo in Brazil report the findings in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and
Experimental Research.
The study suggests that using an energy drink as a mixer will not change a
person’s physical functioning, said Dr Maristela G Monteiro of the Pan
American Health Organisation in Washington, DC.
However, whether the drink combination makes people feel more invigorated is
another question, added Monteiro, who was not involved with the research.
If people ‘feel better’ when they mix their alcohol with an energy drink,
she said, then the concern is that they’ll feel free to drink more than
unusual or perhaps drive a car.
In this study, Monteiro pointed out, the addition of the energy drink did
not alter participants’ blood alcohol levels or certain other physiological
effects of drinking.
“It’s not changing the basic effects of alcohol,” she said.
In a statement, Formigoni said that prior to this study, she and her
colleagues’ surveyed energy drink enthusiasts at Brazilian nightclubs. Of
136 people, 76 percent said they mixed their energy drinks with alcohol,
citing such effects as ‘happiness’, ‘euphoria’, and invigoration.
According to the researchers, such purported benefits may merely reflect a
‘placebo effect’ — more to do with expectations than physiology. Still, they
add, given the popularity of the mixed drinks, further study is needed.
reuters