Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by stagger87 1430 days ago
Are you speculating that the carbonation is helping in some way? Otherwise, hydrating to counter dehydration sounds like a reasonable approach.
3 comments

I think that carbonation actually helps, yes.

It has a positive affect on an irritated stomach lining, I've found. This is easy for me to explain when it's slime/phlegm doing it, as the bubbles helping enzymes and stomach acid dissolve the goo.

I'm seldom enough drunk to have a good sample, but liquor isn't good for the stomach, and I've cautiously drunk a pint of sparkling water with complete success, while knowing that still water would have come back up within five minutes.

Maybe the stimulation of the bubbles promotes the lining to exude what it's supposed to, which alcohol strips away? No idea but I do think it materially helps.

Perhaps it is the fizzy feeling of the drink that makes it more palatable when you are drunk and your throat is dry after a night of partying.
Kind of… For me a cold glass of sparking mineral water tastes a lot better than tap, so I’m far more likely to drink it.

Plus mineral water does contain far more electrolytes than tap which I think has a non-zero effect