The Daily Telegraph

Flashing lights can beat the curse of jet-lag

- By Sarah Knapton

JET-LAG can be prevented by “hacking” into the body’s circadian rhythm during sleep using a flashing alarm clock, Stanford University has discovered.

Many people suffer from the sluggish feeling after flying to a different time zone as the body struggles to reorientat­e itself.

But scientists have shown that it is possible for travellers to get a head start on jetlag by tricking the body into thinking that dawn is breaking earlier.

Being subjected to short flashes of light while asleep before a trip speeds up the process of adjusting to a different time-zone, researcher­s have proven.

“This may be a new way of adjusting much more quickly to time changes than other methods in use today,” said Dr Jamie Zeitzer, assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioura­l sciences at Stanford University in California.

Dr Zeitzer said it was a kind of “biological hacking” that convinced the brain the day had started earlier. Researcher­s synchronis­ed the sleep routine of 39 people aged 19 to 36 so they were going to bed and waking up at the same time every day for about two weeks.

They then had the volunteers sleep in the lab, where half were exposed to a sequence of flashes of various frequencie­s for an hour while asleep.

The study found that a sequence of two-millisecon­d flashes of light, similar to a camera flash, 10 seconds apart elicited a near twohour difference in the onset of sleepiness the following day. The therapy effectivel­y creates a “false dawn” in the brain, which more closely synchronis­es with sunrise in a new country, if travelling from West to East.

The researcher­s, who published their work in the Journal of Clinical Investigat­ion said the technology could also help shiftworke­rs adjust to unusual working patterns.

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