Dr. Jim Schaefer will be answering this question. He’s an anthropology professor at and an alcohol metabolism expert. (Yes, that’s a real job. And yes, it does involve a lot of drinking.)
“Raising metabolism by exercise would have a minimal effect on blood alcohol level,” Schaefer says. Running home from a bar won’t do much more to sober you up than taking a cab home.
As for sweating it out in a sauna, Schaefer says that’s “not a reliable practice for hangover” either. “Just the opposite is better,” he says.
You should drink water to counter alcohol’s dehydrating effects, and you will feel better lying in a cool bed than on a hot wooden bench. Schaefer also points out that a sauna would be an awkward place to hurl; your bed is probably closer to a toilet.
So can you exercise away a hangover?
Nope.
“No physical exercise can reliably reduce the chemical soup inside your gut. Time is the most reliable way to get back to zero and feeling normal,” Schaefer says.
Bottom line: Skip the sauna and the run in favor of a cool bed and plenty of drinking water.
Schaefer's tips for avoiding that exercise-crippling hangover:
1. Clear Alcohol Is Best
Hangovers are partly caused by cogeners, byproducts of fermentation found in alcoholic beverages. You’ll find the most cogeners in darker liquors, so stick to lighter ones like vodka. “Clear is best,” Schaefer says. “Multi-distilled or filtered is even better.”
2. Take It Neat
Tough luck for all of you who enjoy a little fizz in your glass. Carbonation speeds up your body’s absorption of alcohol, so have your drink neat or with water.
3. Watch the Clock
“The body takes care of a drink and a quarter per hour by itself,” Schaefer says. Slow down, nurse your drink, or dance to distract yourself from pounding too much too fast.
4. Ride Out the Headache
Never take acetaminophen (a.k.a. Tylenol) for a hangover—it's metabolized by the liver and can cause liver damage or failure, particularly in heavy drinkers.
5. Keep Drinking
Pass on the hair of the dog—drink water. “Alcohol dries us out and that is a major contributor to hangovers,” Schaefer says. (ϳԹ Senior Executive Editor Michael Roberts found that out the hard way.)