My social connections are Sunday night, jazz; Tuesday night, jazz; Thursday night, trivia. All at bars so some alcohol is involved and since preventing dementia is vastly more important that this problem which doesn't exist for me.
My diet quality is pretty decent now with meals from Home Chef.
How Alcohol Affects Nutrition, Vitamin Levels, and Metabolism in the Human Body
Introduction
Alcohol and micronutrient absorption and status
Effects of alcohol on metabolic pathways
AUD and diet quality
Clinical and public health implications
Research gaps and future directions
Conclusions
References
Further reading
Chronic alcohol consumption disrupts nutrient absorption, metabolism, and dietary quality, contributing to widespread micronutrient deficiencies and metabolic dysfunction. These nutritional disturbances exacerbate liver disease, neurological damage, and recovery challenges in individuals with alcohol use disorder.
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Introduction
This article explores the intersection between drinking and nutrition to reveal how alcohol-induced malnutrition can perpetuate a cycle of craving and relapse.
Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is strongly associated with disturbances in nutritional status arising from both reduced dietary intake and alcohol-mediated disruptions in nutrient absorption, metabolism, storage, and utilization. These disturbances contribute to systemic complications, including liver disease, neurological dysfunction, immune impairment, and metabolic dysregulation. Alcohol-derived calories frequently displace nutrient-dense foods, while chronic exposure alters gastrointestinal, hepatic, and endocrine processes required for maintaining nutritional homeostasis.1,3,4
Alcohol and micronutrient absorption and status
The most severe nutritional consequence of chronic alcohol consumption is the depletion of micronutrients that occurs due to impaired intestinal absorption and increased renal excretion.1 Specifically, ethanol acts as a molecular disruptor of the brush border membrane (BBM) by targeting specific transporters required for the uptake of water-soluble vitamins.
Chronic ethanol consumption has been directly implicated in vitamin B1 deficiency by inhibiting the activity of SLC19A2, a transporter protein for thiamine. Similar inhibitory effects on the absorption of vitamins C and B12, riboflavin, biotin, and folate have been clinically observed.
Alcohol can also impair sodium-dependent and carrier-mediated nutrient transport systems located on intestinal epithelial cells, including transporters involved in glucose, amino acid, and micronutrient uptake. Disruption of these brush-border transport processes alters the function of intestinal enterocytes and contributes to malabsorption of essential nutrients in the small intestine.2
Alcohol consumption also alters the absorption and systemic concentrations of several macroelements and trace elements, including magnesium, potassium, sodium, calcium, selenium, zinc, chromium, and phosphorus. These disturbances may result from gastrointestinal malabsorption, increased urinary losses caused by alcohol’s diuretic effects, and impaired hepatic storage or metabolic regulation.7
Ethanol intake also reduces intestinal absorption of calcium, zinc, iron, and magnesium, in addition to interfering with dietary fat absorption in a dose-dependent manner. Drinking alcohol, even in moderate amounts, also reduces glucose absorption by reducing its maximal rate of uptake to limit its active transport into the bloodstream, rather than through its interactions with a specific transporter.
In addition to water-soluble vitamins, chronic alcohol use may also contribute to deficiencies in fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, and K), particularly in individuals with liver disease, steatorrhea, or impaired lipid digestion. These vitamins play essential roles in immune function, bone metabolism, antioxidant defense, and blood coagulation, and their depletion may exacerbate complications associated with chronic alcohol use.6
Ethanol possesses a high caloric density despite being entirely devoid of essential vitamins, minerals, and macronutrients.1 Thus, in addition to the direct effects of ethanol intake on nutrient absorption, primary malnutrition also arises due to the substitution of dietary carbohydrate, protein, and fat intake with alcoholic calories.
Furthermore, alcohol consumption can disrupt iron homeostasis through alterations in the hepatic hormone hepcidin, which regulates intestinal iron absorption and systemic iron distribution. Experimental evidence suggests that alcohol exposure can suppress hepatic hepcidin expression while modifying ferroportin activity and other iron-regulatory proteins. These alterations may lead to abnormal iron distribution and contribute to oxidative stress and liver injury in alcohol-related liver disease.8
Effects of alcohol on metabolic pathways
Hepatic ethanol metabolism primarily occurs through the alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) pathway, which generates acetaldehyde, a highly reactive toxin that forms DNA and protein adducts.1 This process further reduces nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) to NADH, which significantly increases the NADH/NAD+ ratio. The subsequent inhibition of fatty acid oxidation while promoting triglyceride synthesis directly leads to hepatic steatosis.2
Additional metabolic pathways involved in ethanol metabolism include the microsomal ethanol-oxidizing system (MEOS), largely mediated by cytochrome P450 2E1 (CYP2E1), and catalase-mediated oxidation in peroxisomes. Activation of these pathways promotes the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), contributing to oxidative stress, lipid peroxidation, mitochondrial dysfunction, and inflammatory signaling.7
Ethanol also acts as a metabolic toxin by inhibiting the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway, a central regulator of muscle protein synthesis. Furthermore, alcohol reduces the phosphorylation of downstream targets such as ribosomal protein S6 kinase beta-1 (S6K1) and eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E-binding protein 4EBP1, thereby preventing protein synthesis.4
These alterations contribute to skeletal muscle wasting, metabolic dysfunction, and impaired energy homeostasis.9 Chronic inflammation and oxidative stress further suppress anabolic signaling pathways involved in tissue repair and metabolic regulation.7,9
AUD and diet quality
Diet quality in individuals with AUD can vary greatly during periods of active use and post-cessation recovery. During active drinking, diet quality is generally poor, with patients scoring an average of 42.9 on the Healthy Eating Index-2015 (HEI-2015), compared with 54.3 in healthy controls.4 Using the Nova classification system, ultra-processed foods accounted for approximately 51.8% of total energy intake among individuals with active AUD.4
Despite apparently adequate caloric intake in some individuals with AUD, micronutrient deficiencies remain common because alcohol interferes with nutrient absorption, metabolism, and biological utilization.4

