Auto-Brewery Syndrome: The Ability to Brew Beer in Your Gut

This guy’s beer belly will beat yours any day. In 2013, Dr. Justin McCarthy, a gastroenterologist, and Barbara Cordell, dean of nursing at Panola College, featured a paper in the International Journal of Clinical Medicine, detailing a strange case. A 61-year-old man went to the emergency room complaining of dizziness. After several tests, the nurses determined the man was drunk. Five times more than the legal limit drunk. Except the man hadn’t had any alcohol that day.

What was causing his phantom intoxication? Turns out, it was an overbalance of brewer’s yeast in his gut. His own intestines had been functioning as an internal brewery, essentially making and digesting beer in his belly. Whenever he ate starch, the yeast fermented the sugar into ethanol, making him drunk. The issue has since been dubbed “auto-brewery syndrome.”

If you’re worried about your sandwiches and chips, don’t be. Most of the time, brewer’s yeast just passes through our systems like any other food. It’s only rare cases that the yeast may take up residency in the guy and cause problems. And while we imagine it must be embarrassing at times to get drunk without drinking, it could be a pretty neat party trick.

H/T NPR + Picthx Lindsey G

More content

Eating Out
Taco Bell’s Baja Blast Pie Is Finally Here—But At Select Locations Only
Recent speculation of Taco Bell’s much-hyped Baja Blast Pie being available nationwide soon can now be put to rest. Taco Bell just confirmed that the…
,
Products
ALDI Offering $40 Thanksgiving Meal That Feeds 10 People
The Trump Administration has agreed to pay only half of the benefits owed to SNAP recipients this month, leaving many to wonder if they will…
,
Eating OutPartners
This Texas Pickle Festival Might Be The Craziest Food Party In America
If you’ve ever loved a pickle enough to indulge in a whole day dedicated to it, then The Big Dill World’s Largest Pickle Party is…
,
Burger
We Deliver!

Enter your email address below and we'll deliver our top stories straight to your inbox