How Alcohol Is Produced In The Human Body
When sugar is combined with yeast, the process of fermentation produces ethanol (alcohol) and carbon dioxide. We often ingest sugar (probably too much for most of us), and carbohydrates are metabolized into sugar (glucose), so sugar is typically present in our bodies. Yeast is also typically present in our bodies: we ingest it in foods, and at least one type of yeast (candida) lives inside our bodies.
Because our bodies contain sugar and yeast, we all have the capacity for fermentation to occur. Ordinarily, however the fermentation does not take place. It seems that fermentation occurs when there are unusually high levels of yeast. Yeast levels often increase when people take antibiotics or have weakened immune systems.
Auto-Brewery Syndrome Can Affect Medical Treatment
One woman was denied a liver transplant because her urine contained a high level of alcohol. The woman denied drinking, and testing revealed her urine contained sugar and yeast. Further testing showed the sugars from her urine continued to ferment in the lab. The doctors concluded the sugar in her bladder was fermenting into alcohol. The patient was ultimately permitted to re-apply for a liver transplant.
Auto-Brewery Syndrome Can Also Lead To DUI Charges
A man in Ohio was charged with DUI, his blood alcohol level was .200, and officers disbelieved him when he denied alcohol ingestion. Doctors determined there was a high level of yeast in his digestive system, likely caused by his use of antibiotics. He was treated with anti-fungal therapy and probiotics, and his yeast level was significantly reduced. It is unclear how his DUI case was resolved.
Ohio OVI Law And Auto-Brewery Syndrome
Ohio law criminalizes operating a vehicle with a prohibited concentration of alcohol in one’s breath, blood or urine. Even if the alcohol in a person’s body is not impairing the person’s driving ability, operating a vehicle ‘over the limit’ is ‘per se’ illegal.
However, for a person to be guilty of a criminal offense, Ohio Revised Code section 2901.21 requires that the person’s conduct is voluntary. As that requirement relates to OVI, the person’s operation of the vehicle and the person’s impairment or prohibited alcohol level must both be voluntary. A person with an alcohol level ‘over the limit’ due to auto-brewery system does not engage in voluntary conduct which results in the prohibited alcohol level, so the person is not guilty of OVI.
While auto-brewery syndrome is not a common condition, it is reported to be under-diagnosed. The strategic use of this condition as a defense to OVI may also be uncommon, but this article highlights the importance of hiring DUI/OVI lawyers familiar with OVI defenses, even those which are uncommon.