How DHM In Joyrise Supports Your Liver After Drinking

How DHM In Joyrise Supports Your Liver After Drinking

Your liver is the true workhorse when you drink. It breaks down alcohol into acetaldehyde — a toxic byproduct — before converting it into a safer form your body can flush out. That middle step is the rough part: acetaldehyde is strongly linked to nausea, headaches, flushing, and long-term liver stress.

This is where dihydromyricetin (DHM) comes in. Research suggests it can help the liver process alcohol more efficiently, protect cells from oxidative stress, and support recovery. And because Joyrise® uses a patented delivery system that makes DHM highly bioavailable, you actually get to feel those benefits.


Why Alcohol Stresses the Liver

  • Step 1: Alcohol is first broken down by enzymes into acetaldehyde, which is even more toxic than alcohol itself.
  • Step 2: Another enzyme converts acetaldehyde into acetate, which is harmless.
  • The problem: When you drink heavily, acetaldehyde builds up, leading to liver stress, inflammation, and hangover symptoms (Frontiers in Pharmacology, 2020).

How DHM Helps


The Catch: Poor Absorption

Like many plant compounds, raw DHM isn’t absorbed well. Less than 5% typically makes it into your bloodstream (Xenobiotica, 2017). That means most “high milligram” products on the market aren’t actually helping your liver.


How Joyrise Fixes It

  • Patented blend: Natural carriers that make DHM dissolve and stay stable.
  • Fast acting: Benefits felt in about 30 minutes, not hours.
  • Liver-first design: Better absorption means more DHM reaches your liver — where it matters most.

Instead of wasting DHM your body can’t use, Joyrise ensures each milligram counts.


Bottom Line

Your liver takes the biggest hit every time you drink. DHM can help protect it — but only if your body can actually absorb it. That’s why Joyrise’s patented delivery system makes all the difference.


References

  1. Frontiers in Pharmacology (2020) – Alcohol metabolism and acetaldehyde stress
  2. Journal of Ethnopharmacology (2017) – DHM protecting the liver in alcohol models
  3. Alcohol & Alcoholism (2018) – DHM enhancing detox enzymes
  4. Frontiers in Pharmacology (2021) – DHM reducing oxidative stress
  5. Xenobiotica (2017) – DHM’s low natural bioavailability
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