Changing the time you eat could help beat jetlag, research shows

It’s time to ditch the sleeping pills and invest a watch

Sarah Jones
Friday 02 June 2017 05:16 EDT
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Overcoming jet lag could be as simple as changing the time you eat
Overcoming jet lag could be as simple as changing the time you eat (Getty Images)

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Travel junkies will be no stranger to jet lag – you know, that sleepy state of grogginess that leaves you feeling starved of sleep but unable to doze off all at the same time.

But, forget sleeping pills or knocking back a few glasses of wine because overcoming jet lag could be as simple as changing the time you eat, new research suggests.

In the first human study of its kind, researchers from the University of Surrey have discovered that changing your meals to match the time in your destination could help synchronise your internal body clock.

They also believe that this method could benefit shift workers who struggle to fall asleep.

“Altering meal times can reset the body clock regulating sugar metabolism in a drug-free way,” said lead author Dr Jonathan Johnston.

“This will help us design feeding regimes to reduce the risk of developing health problems such as obesity and cardiovascular disease in people with disturbed circadian rhythms.

“So if you are flying back home from the US, try and eat closer to the time you normally would in Britain.”

In the study, researchers analysed the impact of changing meal times on the body clocks of 10 volunteers who were all provided with breakfast, lunch and dinner.

In the first stage of the study, breakfast was provided 30 minutes after waking, with later meals being given at subsequent five hour intervals.

The second stage of the study saw volunteers given their breakfast five hours after waking.

Immediately after each stage, blood and fat samples were taken to determine volunteers' circadian rhythms.

Results showed that postponing meals by five hours also delays blood sugar rhythms by the same amount of time which proves that controlling blood sugar could help to synchronise your body clock.

“It has been shown that regular jet lag and shift work have adverse effects on the body, including metabolic disturbances,” Dr Johnston explained.

“Altering meal times can reset the body clocks regulating sugar metabolism in a drug-free way.”

It’s a method supported by the NHS too who say that jet lag can be beaten by establishing a new routine, “eat and sleep at the correct times for your new time zone, not at the time you usually eat and sleep at home.”

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