Waterloo Region Record

Breakthrou­gh could cure jet lag forever

- Eric Rosen

The longest flights in the world are just getting longer. Emirates’ latest route from Dubai to Auckland clocks in at 16.5 hours — it’s the lengthiest flight on the market — and Qantas plans to launch a new 17-hour route between Perth and London in 2018. But painful as long-haul flights can be, it’s their aftermath-jet lag-that you should really be dreading.

That might soon change, though. The medical community has taken the next step toward finding a jet-lag cure, thanks to a Salk Institute study published last year in Cell. According to Dr. Ronald Evans, the lead author of the study, a protein called REV-ERBa may be the key to unlocking a regular, healthy circadian rhythm no matter where (or when) in the world you are.

Turns out, the circadian rhythm, a physiologi­cal cycle that roughly matches up to the length of a day, doesn’t just regulate when we feel sleepy — it also regulates when we get hungry and when we feel most active.

“Under normal circumstan­ces,” Evans said, “we sleep when it’s dark, and wake up and eat when the sun rises.”

Eating is a key point: circadian rhythm is about both sleep and metabolism. In other words, you can fight jet lag by consuming (and burning) calories at the right times as well as trying to sleep at proper times.

Your circadian rhythm doesn’t regulate itself: REV-ERBa does. According to Evans’ study, the protein acts as a sort of master switch that co-ordinates the “turning on and off ” of genes that regulate our circadian rhythms, including those involved in metabolism.

Pinpointin­g that master switch and understand­ing how it works is the first step to controllin­g it artificial­ly. By regulating both the amount of REV-ERBa in the body as well as how much it fluctuates over the course of a day, we might eventually find a cure for jet lag. And it doesn’t end there: the same science may eventually offer relief to people with chronic sleeping issues and other chronic conditions that can develop as a result of a disrupted circadian cycle.

A pill that prevents jet lag is still years down the road, but there are plenty of simple but specific strategies that let you take matters into your own hands. Yes, different strokes work for different folks — frequent road warriors tout everything from popping a pill before takeoff to doing yoga upon arrival to apps — but the more we understand the mechanisms that create jet lag, the better equipped we are to pick and choose our tactics.

Evans’ biggest take-away is to place equal importance on all three of those pillars of circadian rhythm when resetting your schedule in a new time zone. The sooner you’re moving around, sleeping, and eating at the right times, the sooner you’ll adjust.

The heightened role of diet in fighting jet lag led us to call in nutritioni­st Kimberly Snyder for extra advice; her clients include A-listers like Kerry Washington, Channing Tatum, and Ben Stiller, and she’s recently co-written a book with Deepak Chopra that discusses circadian rhythms at length.

Her pro tip: Skip the hotel breakfast. And don’t even think about room service.

Instead, says Evans, you should wake up at a normal hour and head offsite for a morning meal: it’ll reset both your activity and feeding cycles while getting you some fresh air and forcing you to wake up at a reasonable time. Counterint­uitive as it sounds, it’s far better than easing into your morning under the hotel duvet with a cup of coffee.

“We can use food and light exposure to adjust more rapidly by timing when we eat, sleep, wake up, and are exposed to natural light,” she advises. Sunlight, she says, “helps signal and reset our circadian rhythms,” allowing our bodies to adapt more quickly. More tips for weary travelers:

Get ahead of the game. Some shift their sleep schedules before a trip; thanks to Evans’ study on REV-ERBa, we now know that you can shift your meal schedule, too. Snyder says “we should fast while on the plane, and then eat soon after landing, in order to reset our rhythm.” And if you land with a ravenous appetite at midnight, try to avoid an absurdly late dinner. Instead, “time your first meal to match the nearest meal time of your new time zone,” she said.

You are what you eat. “Be sure not to eat a protein- or fatrich dinner the night before travel,” said Snyder. “Not only will that make you feel heavy [on the plane], but it also directs energy into digestion through the night.” This makes it harder to fall asleep in flight-as if it wasn’t challengin­g already. Skipping the plane food doesn’t hurt, either.

You’re also what you drink. “Drink plenty of water, and bring natural vitamin C or antioxidan­t packets to mix into your water on the plane and after your flight,” advised Snyder. She said travelers should also avoid alcohol and caffeine prior to, during, and after travel since both are dehydratin­g and can have deleteriou­s effects the nervous system. If you do drink, go with the frequent travelers’ rule of thumb: two glasses of water for every glass of wine or cup of coffee.

Supplement­s help. You know to take melatonin if you can’t fall asleep in your new time zone. But what about magnesium oxide? It can keep your digestive health in check (we’re talking about the end process of nutrition here) which contribute­s a “regular” circadian rhythm.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? An Emirates plane lands at Logan Internatio­nal Airport in Boston.
BLOOMBERG An Emirates plane lands at Logan Internatio­nal Airport in Boston.

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