The Mail on Sunday

How 5:2 can improve your travels... by beating jet-lag

- DR MICHAEL MOSLEY’S

ITRAVEL a lot for work – most recently to New Zealand – and although I love it, I have always struggled with jet-lag. Then a few years ago I discovered the joys of intermitte­nt fasting and not only did lose weight, but I found that my jet-lag was greatly improved.

Last week a woman called Sarah contacted me to say she’d experience­d the same. Was the 5:2 responsibl­e, she asked, and if so, why?

Surprising­ly, there is indeed a link between intermitte­nt fasting and jet-lag – a relationsh­ip first noticed in the 1980s by Dr Charles Ehret, a researcher at the University of Chicago.

Jet-lag has been a subject of interest to me recently, having returned from a work trip to New Zealand which forced my body clock to adapt rapidly.

Jet-lag, caused by the imbalance between your internal body clock and your new time zone, can be awful, with symptoms including insomnia, hunger, irritabili­ty, constipati­on or diarrhoea.

If you have flown from the UK to Sydney, for example, your body clock will tell your brain it is 10pm and time for bed, while everyone around you is eating lunch. It takes about a day to adjust to each time zone you move through, so if flying to Sydney, it can take a week.

RESET YOUR CLOCK

DR EHRET suggested that you could reset your internal clock much faster if, for three days before flying, you alternate feasting and fasting.

On the one ‘feast’ day, he recommende­d a protein rich breakfast, an above averagesiz­ed lunch and a carbohydra­te-heavy dinner. On the two, ‘fast’ days, he suggested eating just 800 calories. Ehret coined this the ‘Argone Diet’. So does it work? Two years ago, the US military put the Argone Diet to the test when 186 soldiers travelling to South Korea were split into two groups; feasting-fasting, and eating normally.

Those who tried the Argone Diet were seven and a half times less likely to experience serious jet-lag than those who ate normally. The exact reason why this works remains unknown, but I suspect it resets the healthy bacteria inside your gut that influence the body in many unexpected ways. If any of you give this a go, do write and tell me how you get on.

DO THE ARGONE DIET

START three days before you fly. On day one, a FAST day, restrict calories to 800. You can find suitable recipes in the 8-Week Blood Sugar diet book, or on thebloodsu­gardiet.com.

On day two, FEAST; eat a high-protein breakfast, an above-average-size lunch and a high-carbohydra­te dinner and don’t drink coffee after 5pm.

Repeat the ‘FAST’ instructio­ns for day three.

On the day of flying, eat at the breakfast time of your destinatio­n and do not drink alcohol on the plane. On long flights, try eating and sleeping at the same time as your destinatio­n while on the plane.

THE POWER OF LIGHT

USING bright light to combat jet-lag can be effective when the light shines at certain times of the day.

I would recommend using Entrain, a free app that suggests exact times you should be exposed to light.

I keep it simple. When heading to New York – five hours ahead of the UK – I put myself on New York time before flying. I delay breakfast until 8am New York time (1pm here), skip lunch and have a snack at about 7pm (midnight here). I go to bed at a normal time.

Next morning I get up early, grab some morning light and find that my body clock is well and truly reset.

A FLIGHT TO SYDNEY COULD TAKE AWEEK TO RECOVER FROM

 ??  ?? Jet-lag is the bane of business travellers
Jet-lag is the bane of business travellers
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