Dihydromyricetin, almost always called DHM, is a flavonoid extracted from the Japanese raisin tree (Hovenia dulcis) and Chinese vine tea (Ampelopsis grossedentata). Most people use it to take the edge off drinking. A dose before or after alcohol tends to leave you sharper that night and less wrecked the next morning. It's the active ingredient in almost every modern hangover supplement on the market.

DHM helps with faster acetaldehyde clearance, has anti-inflammatory effects and reduce the liver damage but also reduces the buzz (GABA-A antagonism).

DHM seems to blunt some of alcohol's effects on the brain, push the liver to clear alcohol and its toxic byproduct acetaldehyde faster, and reduce the inflammation that drives a lot of hangover symptoms. It won't make heavy drinking safe and it won't stop you from getting drunk if you drink hard enough. What it does, in the people it works for, is shift the experience: you feel the alcohol a bit less acutely, recover a bit faster, and the next morning feels less like a write-off. Separately, there's reasonable human evidence that DHM improves liver function and metabolic markers in people with fatty liver, so it has a second use case for anyone with elevated liver enzymes or NAFLD on bloodwork.

Deep-dive


Dosage:


Here's what you can expect:

If DHM works for you, the most common subjective effects are: you feel the alcohol slightly less, you sober up a bit faster (the second half of a drinking session feels less impaired than usual), and the next morning is noticeably less rough. Headache, nausea, and brain fog are typically what improve most. The effect is real but modest, somewhere in the range of one or two fewer drinks' worth of hangover, not a complete eraser. People expecting to feel completely fine after a hard night will be disappointed.

If DHM doesn't work for you, you'll notice nothing. Response varies and not everyone gets the effect, possibly due to absorption differences, ALDH genetics, or the specific symptoms that drive your hangovers (DHM helps with the inflammatory and GABA-rebound components more than dehydration or sleep disruption).

For NAFLD, you won't feel anything subjectively in the short term. What you'll see, if it's working, is liver enzymes (ALT, AST, GGT) drop on bloodwork at 3 months along with improvements in fasting glucose, LDL, and insulin resistance markers.


Side effects & risks: