In the US, a CNN-based man cracked down on police and found that the study found that the body was a rare patient whose alcohol produced itself.

According to CNN, the 42-year-old man who refused to measure alcohol was taken to the hospital in 2014 when he was arrested for police drinking in North Carolina. That's it.

That's when he drank 10 glasses an hour, and he denied alleged drunk driving because he didn't drink anything.

Doctors did not believe him, but three years later researchers at the Richmond University Medical Center confirmed that the man was true.

The man's digestive system, which had no alcoholic beverages such as beer or cocktails, had a yeast that converts carbohydrates into alcohol.

The body itself was like a beer brewery.

The findings were recently published in the British medical journal BMJ Open Gastroenterology.

The man was diagnosed with a rare disease called auto-brewery syndrome (ABS), also known as digestive organ fermentation syndrome.

The disease, in which the enzyme converts carbohydrates into alcohol, usually occurs in the stomach and front of the small intestine.

Fahad Malik, senior researcher at the University of Alabama, led the study.

"It looks like a drunk person, but the difference is that these patients can be treated with antibacterial drugs," he added.

The man took antibiotics with a finger wound in 2011, and since then he has been aggressive, sometimes experiencing depression, memory loss, and drowsiness.

Researchers at Richmond University believe antibiotics may have altered the microbial community in his digestive tract and affected yeast reproduction.

In his digestive tract, a yeast bacterium, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, was found mainly in beer brewing and fermenting bread.

Carbohydrate-free meals were not the perfect solution, and the body returned to normal by balancing the bacteria in the digestive tract by adding probiotics such as antibacterial therapy and lactic acid bacteria.

The rare disease of automatic brewing syndrome was found in Japan in the 1970s in the 20s and 30 cases in the United States.

Recent research is at hand.

In 2015, a woman in northern New York State was found guilty of drinking, but she was acquitted for submitting evidence that she had the disease.

(Photo = Google Images, Yonhap News)