GLP-1 Drugs Slow the Rate at Which Alcohol Reaches the Brain

Staff
By Staff
7 Min Read

New study results may help explain why people taking popular diabetes and weight loss drugs like Ozempic and Mounjaro have reported less desire to drink alcohol.

In a small experiment, people on these medications, called GLP-1s, absorbed alcohol into their bloodstream more slowly compared with a group not on these drugs who drank an equivalent amount. They also reported feeling less intoxicated.

“Alcohol must reach the brain and cross the blood-brain barrier to have its effect, so the slower alcohol enters the blood, the slower it reaches the brain,” says study coauthor Alex DiFeliceantonio, PhD, interim co-director of the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute’s Center for Health Behaviors Research at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg.

Experts say that slowdown could make alcohol less satisfying — and possibly less addictive.

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