Dr. Sinatra's HeartMD Institute

Is Your Lifestyle Affecting Your Biological Rhythms?

lifestyle effects biological rhythms

It’s well known that night shift-work can increase the risk of obesity, heart attack, diabetes, and breast cancer. But several common daily habits can mess up your biological rhythms as well. How well is your biological clock ticking? Is it off and dragging, as it is for many folks living in the unnatural and ever-faster modern lane of life?

Late Nights, Bright Lights, Electronic Screens, Jet Lag…

For many, lifestyle includes bright lights at night, cross-currents of electromagnetic fields, constant exposure to electronic screens, keeping late hours, shift-work, or hopscotching business trips by jet from one part the world to another.

As a result, more and more people are developing so-called “circadian disruption,” a disorder undermining our internal biological clocks and physiological rhythms, and, ultimately, our health.

The risks were put in focus in a 2014 article in The Wall Street Journal by Gene Block, the chancellor of UCLA and a professor of psychiatry and biobehavioral science. Dr. Block points out that many people understand such disruption in terms of jet lag, when you cross multiple time zones, but the phenomenon goes well beyond long-distance travel. Circadian disruption can occur as a result of many lifestyle habits that are commonplace for many in today’s culture.  

The circadian rhythm refers to the 24-hour cycle of hormonal patterns based on a natural sequence of light and dark, and rest and activity. The cycle programs your internal clock and affects the activities of hormones, cells, tissues, and organs. Throughout virtually all of history, human activity operated on this natural cycle.

However, that is increasingly less so today. 

People today are active into the night, and some throughout the night because of their work. Bright lights illuminate nocturnal activities. Masses of people spend their evenings, and often beyond, staring into gleaming TV, tablet, computer, and cell phone screens. The “burning of the midnight lamp” is not just a Jimi Hendrix classic. It is a way of life for many. 

According to Dr. Block, this switched-on lifestyle contributes to circadian disruption that can lead to serious diseases, including type 2 diabetes, various cancers, suppressed immune function, cognitive deficits, and premature aging

Clearly, as humans violate the basic law of Nature regarding rest and activity we put ourselves at risk and add additional stressors to life. Whatever the violation, whether it’s job-related or elective staying up late with a computer, modern lifestyle and habits endanger the wondrously precise rhythms and machinery of the body.

Call it what it is: stress. And stress can definitely be a killer (think: heart attacks) and quality of life spoiler.

Common disruptors include tablets and computers. In 2013, experts (Wood B, et al.) at the Lighting Research Center at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute showed that two hours of laptop or tablet use before bedtime can suppress melatonin, a primary circadian hormone involved in promoting sleep. 

This habit, the researchers say, will set you up for sleep disturbances, and other problems. Young adults and adolescents who tend to be night owls need to pay heed here.

Technology developments have led to bigger and brighter screens, says Brittany Wood, one of the researchers. “To produce white light, these electronic devices must emit light at short wavelengths, which makes them potential sources for suppressing or delaying the onset of melatonin in the evening.”

Returning to the jet lag issue, it is interesting to note that researchers in Israel (see Oaklander) have produced fascinating findings indicating that the circadian disruption triggered by night-shift work and jet lag may contribute to diabetes and obesity by disturbing the beneficial bacteria residing in the gut.

“These microbes were completely messed up,” the researchers said.

That is no small thing because the friendly bacteria in your intestines – including familiar names like lactobacillus acidophilus and bifidabacteria – are pivotal to intestinal and immune function. 

Remedies to Protect Your Circadian Rhythm

What can you do to protect your circadian rhythm? Here are some obvious and less obvious recommendations: 

References:

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