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elephant shoes
12-07-2002, 02:44 PM
I tried to do a search on this, but couldn't come up with the right phrasing.

My friend, a most experienced drinker, had a horrible episode last night after drinking a couple of shots with small amounts of tequila in them. He ended up with tunnel vision, was very disoriented, and ended up vomiting for a good part of the night and this morning. He's still in pretty fragile shape, after drinking what would have amounted to less than 2 ounces of the stuff.

He's had a couple of these episodes in the past, so, naturally, he makes sure that any shot he drinks doesn't have any tequila in them. Sure enough, he asked if there was any in these shots, and he was told no. After he drank them, he was told that yes, in fact, there was tequila in them. Ha ha. Very funny. Less than an hour later, he was in rotten shape.

Question: Is there something in tequila, that isn't in other drinks, that causes him to suffer so? Is this active ingredient in any other foods or drinks?

Phlosphr
12-07-2002, 03:24 PM
Blue Agave.

Tequila is made from the suculant blue agave. It looks like a cactus but technically it's not. It is also called the century plant. I have tons of them on my property in Arizona.

Your friend is most likely allergic to the agave. However, it is not uncommon to have an exceptionally cloudy day after a night of binge drinking tequila.. :)



...Stay away my fren, stay away....

RM Mentock
12-07-2002, 03:30 PM
Originally posted by elephant shoes
I tried to do a search on this, but couldn't come up with the right phrasing.
Well, we've come full circle. If the internet doesn't have it, maybe the dictionary (http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=tequila) will. :)

BioHazard
12-07-2002, 04:05 PM
The drink Elements: Rain has blue agave in it. Does he get sick from that?

elephant shoes
12-07-2002, 07:38 PM
Originally posted by RM Mentock
Well, we've come full circle. If the internet doesn't have it, maybe the dictionary (http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=tequila) will. :)

I'm glad there was a smiley at the end of your post, RM Mentock, otherwise, you might have gotten my back up a little bit. :) I love my dictionary, and use it more than the average bear. I did look it up in my Oxford, as well as on the 'net.

I could have been more specific: I know that tequila is made from blue agave. But is nothing else added to it, to make tequila?

elephant shoes
12-07-2002, 07:41 PM
Oh, and thanks for the tip, BioHazard. I don't know if he's tried it. I'll look for it, next time I'm at the cornershop.

SC_Wolf
12-07-2002, 08:02 PM
The Elements line of beverages are bottled by Snapple, if this helps the search any.

RM Mentock
12-08-2002, 05:02 AM
Originally posted by elephant shoes
I could have been more specific: I know that tequila is made from blue agave. But is nothing else added to it, to make tequila?
Worms

I'm kidding. Not all tequila has worms. And perhaps there are some brands of tequila that have other additives. I think that Biohazard's suggestion would be an interesting experiment. You might want to mix some of it with straight grain alcohol though, otherwise the effect might not be as pronounced.

New meaning to the snap in Snapple.

SC_Wolf
12-08-2002, 05:31 AM
Here's Cecil on the subject of worms in Tequila. (http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a990702b.html)

AWB
12-08-2002, 06:23 AM
Active ingredient in Tequila?

Alcohol.

cleops
12-08-2002, 09:37 AM
Originally posted by AWB
Active ingredient in Tequila?

Alcohol.

Hooray! The answer!!

Speaker for the Dead
12-08-2002, 10:17 AM
Actually, I was about to say alchohol too...

AskNott
12-08-2002, 10:39 AM
"...and the worms ate into his brain." --Pink Floyd's The Wall

Mr. Moto
12-08-2002, 10:59 AM
This could also be a tequila-induced migraine, accompanied by vomiting. As a migraine suffferer, I can tell you different kinds of booze affect me in different ways. Some kinds are almost guaranteed to give me a headache.

This is why I drank rum-and-tonics all summer. I can have them with absolutely no ill effects.

(For conoisseurs, I use Don Q crystal rum and add lime and a dash of bitters.)

t-keela
12-08-2002, 11:30 AM
Actually tequila is quite different than other liquors. It is included with other "natural" neurotransmitter mimickers such as marijuana and peyote. They actually fit into the receptors in your CNS (central nervous system) and produce euphoria in ways that alcohol can't. The alcohol is just an added benefit...:cool:
Many people can't handle tequila, whereas they might do fine with bourbon or some other alcohol.

t-keela
12-08-2002, 11:37 AM
I don't know if this link goes into the chemical analysis or not but it's a pretty good tequila site:http://www.ianchadwick.com/tequila/mexdrinks.html

thanks to Pantellerite for this link..:)


Peace

TheLadyLion
12-08-2002, 03:09 PM
My guess is your friend's reaction is indeed attributable to the blue agave. I work as a chemical dependency counselor, and almost without exception, my alcoholic clients will tell me of severe adverse physical reactions they have had to tequila that they have not had with other types of alcohol. People often get disoriented, violent and extremely ill when they have ingested tequila..... these are all typical of an allergic reaction. Of course, they are also signs of inebriation as well! But tequila seems to be particularly likely to produce these types of reactions in people, even "seasoned veterans" in the area of alcohol consumption.

Yossarian
12-09-2002, 09:33 AM
Originally posted by t-keela

thanks to Pantellerite for this link..:)
[/B]

No problem!

Otherwise, I, too, was just going to come in here to post "Alcohol".

The Bad Astronomer
12-09-2002, 11:53 AM
Originally posted by t-keela
Actually tequila is quite different than other liquors. It is included with other "natural" neurotransmitter mimickers such as marijuana and peyote. They actually fit into the receptors in your CNS (central nervous system) and produce euphoria in ways that alcohol can't.

That's fascinating. I'll have to look into this more. During grad school, I found I have an affinity for good tequila (sometimes I think it helped me get through grad school). I always wondered why drinking tequila made me feel different than, say, drinking vodka; I wasn't sure if it was because we tended to have fun groups of people over for the tequila nights, or if I was just being subjective.

I am also amazed at the variety and range of quality of tequilas. The ones at $100+ per bottle are actually amazingly good, and make good sipping drinks. Most people are shocked to find that out...

... though probably not as shocked as having me post in a tequila thread. ;-)

kaylasdad99
12-09-2002, 12:04 PM
Originally posted by The Bad Astronomer
... though probably not as shocked as having me post in a tequila thread. ;-)

I had to scroll up to check out your name after that last sentence. I was kinda hoping it would say His4Ever.

Ah, well. One can't have everything, I suppose.

t-keela
12-09-2002, 08:15 PM
http://www.cusu.cam.ac.uk/publications/welfare/drugs/types.html

Just one more post/link for those of you who may be interested. Page down to hallucinogens...

(quote from the previous link)
"Types of drugs...
Besides their treatment as Classes A, B or C by the law, recreational drugs are traditionally grouped according to the type of effect on the user; stimulants, hallucinogens and depressants.

Hallucinogens are drugs that cause altered states of perception and feeling. They include natural substances such as mescaline (from cacti) and psilocybin (from mushrooms), besides chemically manufactured ones such as LSD and MDMA (Ecstasy).

Hallucinogens have powerful mind altering effects. They affect the regions of the brain that are responsible for co-ordination, thought processes, hearing and sight, causing the user to see images, hear sounds and feel sensations that are not really there.

Whereas stimulants act on the neurotransmitter dopamine, hallucinogens act on serotonin, its carriers and receptors.

LSD binds tightly to serotonin receptors causing abnormally high activation of the neuron. Because serotonin has a role in many of the brain's functions, LSD can have widespread effects. These range from rapid emotional swings, altered perception and (in high doses) delusions and visual hallucinations.

MDMA acts on serotonin and dopamine bearing neurons triggering their release. MDMA can cause hallucinations, confusion, depression, sleep problems, drug craving, severe anxiety, and paranoia.

Examples: Cannabis, Ketamine, LSD, Magic Mushrooms, MDMA, mescaline, mescal and tequila. Prozac also inhibits the reabsorption of serotonin." (end quote).Page © CUSU

:eek:



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