Gut bacteria sometimes get people drunk, leading to DUIs and liver disease

Sometimes bacteria lurking in people's guts can get them drunk, even if they don't consume any alcohol.

A white man with a beard sits in the driver's seat of a car clutching his forehead. A hand holds a breathalyzer test toward him
People with a condition called auto-brewery syndrome carry microbes that produce high levels of alcohol when breaking down sugars and carbohydrates.
(Image credit: Shutterstock)

Imagine you're a police officer. You spot a car that's swerving all over the road. You pull the driver over and they're clearly intoxicated. With slurred speech, they swear that they haven't had a drop of alcohol all day. Would you believe them?

In 2024, a Belgian man was acquitted after he was cited three times for DUI within four years. Though his job at a brewery likely raised suspicions, he insisted that he hadn't been drinking. Three doctors confirmed that he suffered from a condition called auto-brewery syndrome and was unaware. People with this syndrome carry microbes in their intestines that produce abnormally high levels of alcohol when breaking down sugars and carbohydrates.

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Bill Sullivan
Professor of Microbiology and Immunology, Indiana University

Bill Sullivan is a professor at Indiana University School of Medicine and the author of Pleased to Meet Me: Genes, Germs, and the Curious Forces That Make Us Who We Are. A Ph.D.-trained molecular biologist and award-winning science communicator, he studies infectious disease and writes for outlets including National Geographic, WIRED, and Scientific American. Sullivan also serves as an editor at PLOS SciComm and on the editorial board of ASBMB Today.