What is methanol and how does it affect the body?

Getty Images glass containing clear liquid on a table with a woman holding a similar glass in the background
The UK Foreign Office advises travellers: “Take care if offered, particularly for free, or when buying spirit-based drinks. If labels, smell, or taste seem wrong, then do not drink.”

Travellers are being warned of the dangers of methanol poisoning after six tourists to Laos have died.

Methanol is an industrial chemical found in antifreeze and windshield washer fluid.

It’s not meant for human consumption and is highly toxic.

Drinking even small amounts can be damaging. A few shots of bootleg spirit containing it can be lethal.

What does methanol do to you?

Methanol poisoning: Understanding the risks and how to prevent it | SBS News

It looks and tastes like alcohol, and the first effects are similar—it can make you feel intoxicated and sick.

Initially, people might not realise anything is wrong.

The harm happens hours later as the body attempts to clear it from the body by breaking it down in the liver.

This metabolism creates toxic by-products called formaldehyde, formate, and formic acid.

These build up, attacking nerves and organs, which can lead to blindness, coma, and death.

Dr. Christopher Morris, a senior lecturer at Newcastle University, said: “Formate, which is the main toxin produced, acts in a similar way to cyanide and stops energy production in cells, and the brain seems to be very vulnerable to this.

“This leads to certain parts of the brain being damaged. The eyes are also directly affected, and this can cause blindness, which is found in many people exposed to high levels of methanol.”

Of the victims so far, five of the six have been women.

Toxicity from methanol is related to the dose you get and how your body handles it.

As with alcohol, the less you weigh, the more you can be affected by a given amount.

Dr. Knut Erik Hovda from Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), which tracks methanol poisonings, says awareness varies a lot among tourists and healthcare staff in different parts of the world—and that could mean delays in diagnosing it.

“The symptoms are often so vague until you get really sick,” he told the BBC.

How is methanol poisoning treated?

Poisoning is a medical emergency and should be treated in hospital.

There are drug treatments that can be given, as well as dialysis to clean the blood.

Some cases can be treated using alcohol (ethanol) to outcompete the methanol metabolism. But this has to be done quickly.

Prof. Alastair Hay, an expert in environmental toxicology from the University of Leeds, explained: “Ethanol acts as a competitive inhibitor, largely preventing methanol breakdown but markedly slowing it down, allowing the body to vent methanol from the lungs and some through the kidneys, and a little through sweat.”

Dr. Hovda said getting help quickly after consuming methanol was crucial to chances of surviving.

“You can ease all affects if you get to the hospital early enough and that hospital has the treatment needed,” he said.

“You can die from a very small proportion of methanol, and you can survive from a quite substantial one, if you get to help.

“The most important antidote is regular alcohol.”

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