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Tuesday, March 24, 2026
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HomeHealth & FitnessGLP-1 Drugs Slow the Rate at Which Alcohol Reaches the Brain

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

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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