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Science & Technology
Why beer makes you happy - and it's not just the alcohol
2017-10-06
[DPA-INTERNATIONAL] Know that warm, fuzzy feeling you get when you've got a beer in your hand after a long day's work? It might not just be the alcohol that's making you feel that way.

According to new research by the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg in Germany, there's an ingredient in beer that activates the brain's reward centre in a similar way to dopamine.

Hordenine, which is found in beer malt, among other things, has a similar effect to the so-called "happy hormone." Researchers have found that hordenine and dopamine both stimulate the so-called dopamine receptor D2 in the brain.

Scientists are yet to establish whether the amount of hordenine contained in beer can produce a noticeable effect on the reward centre. However,
it was a brave man who first ate an oyster...
results so far indicate that hordenine could indeed contribute to boosting the drinker's mood, the researchers said in a statement.

The combination of hordenine and alcohol is most likely to blame for the fact that beer makes people feel good, according to researcher Monika Pischetsrieder. Salsolinol, which is found in chocolate, has the same effect as hordenine, she adds.

Several studies are currently attempting to establish how much hordenine beer contains, and how much of it actually reaches the brain.

So far, Pischetsrieder says, no single ingredient has been found in food or drink that can make us feel happy. Scientists say it is mostly combinations of substances that create a feeling of well-being. With crisps, for example, it is carbohydrates and fat.

The study on hordenine, which was published in the specialist magazine Scientific Reports, started with a computer-based probe involving 13,000 food ingredients.

Researchers assessed whether those ingredients could make it to the dopamine receptor D2. To do that, they set up a digital molecule database, from which 17 substances were selected for laboratory tests.

"It is already surprising that, without us specifically looking at the luxury foodstuffs group, a beer ingredient leads to the activation of the dopamine receptor D2," Pischetsrieder says.

Posted by:Fred

#15  @12 Yah, the old 3# Blue Ribbon, 5# cane sugar, 5 gal water, baker's yeast. My friend Tony got some vicious hangovers and finally pinned it down to the water being run-off from the sheep pasture. Good times!
Posted by: KBK   2017-10-06 23:17  

#14  "because without beer, things do not seem to go as well"
diary of Brother Epp, Capuchin Monastery, Munjor, KS 1902

Courtesy of Free State Brewery, Lawrence, KS. In or around Kansas, give it a try.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2017-10-06 18:47  

#13  Mass-market "American style" beers use rice to boost the alcohol and sugar content. There's enough it tastes like sake to me.

So try a craft brew or an import. Or try cider.
Posted by: Rob Crawford   2017-10-06 18:26  

#12  I fell into a vicious cycle in Ewetah when I could only buy beer from the State. I started a homebrew kit and had the most fun. A 5gal bucket fills about 24-12oz bottles. Two weeks for the bucket to brew and two weeks after bottling to settle. Three years, 5-6.7%, no hangover.
Posted by: Skidmark   2017-10-06 16:08  

#11  When I was in college we had to sign up for some stupid studies as part of our grade. I remember one was hypnotism (didn't work for me).

Turns out I was doing intensive studies on beer effects without getting any credit.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2017-10-06 14:45  

#10  Tap beer gives a headache...try a bottle, Gorb. It's a mood lifter--trainers even give it to racehorses!
Posted by: Whavish Thusoling5684   2017-10-06 13:21  

#9  The combination of hordenine and alcohol is most likely to blame for the fact that beer makes people feel good, according to researcher Monika Pischetsrieder.

Blame?
Posted by: Frank G   2017-10-06 12:35  

#8  also, coors lite or ultra lite keeps my heaaches away
Posted by: 746   2017-10-06 11:25  

#7  Hmm. Variety packs . . . . Thanks for the tip, Bobby. :-)
Posted by: gorb   2017-10-06 11:18  

#6  I'm buying a 12 pack and Horden-nine!
Posted by: Skidmark   2017-10-06 10:36  

#5  #3 - my Dad was a chemical engineer and told me there are wheat beers, corn beers, and maybe others I have forgotten. Bud gives me a headache; other beers do not. Try another brand, Gorb!
Posted by: Bobby   2017-10-06 10:01  

#4  Beer: so much more than just a breakfast drink
Posted by: DarthVader   2017-10-06 09:46  

#3  Now they just need to figure out a way to keep me from getting a headache after one glass and we're all set!
Posted by: gorb   2017-10-06 01:59  

#2  Now, this is some scientific "consensus" I can get behind.
Posted by: AlmostAnonymous5839   2017-10-06 01:14  

#1  Ben Franklin: "Beer is proof that God loves us and likes to see us happy."
Posted by: M. Murcek   2017-10-06 00:47  

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