Health Medicine


Your Resource for Good Health

Medicine List | News | Samples
  eHealth Recomends the Following Products & Services -
 
 
 

Jet Lag and its Effects

Jet lag symptoms are associated with the misalignment of the body's normal day/night rhythm. The body normally has a cycle in which melatonin (a natural hormone that aligns sleep cycles and other physiological functions) reaches peak blood levels at around 2 am.

When crossing time zones, this peak needs to be adjusted (shifted) so that it always peaks at this time of the night. Because of the changed time zones, misalignment of the cycle occurs, giving many but not all travelers symptoms of jet lag. The range of symptoms include sleep disturbances, daytime fatigue, weakness, headache, sleepiness, and irritability. Most symptoms disappear by the fifth day after traveling across a 6-hour time zone. It is difficult to compensate for jet lag for trips shorter than 3 days and some would advise against attempting to do so.

One way of shifting the melatonin peak to its physiological position is to take melatonin tablets and push or pull the peak blood levels by timing the tablets appropriately. To use melatonin, the following schedule can be followed:

Eastward Travel

Westward Travel

Cautions

Melatonin can produce sleepiness and reduced alertness. Persons taking melatonin should not drive, operate heavy machinery, or perform tasks requiring alertness for 4 to 5 hours after taking melatonin. The timing of the dose of melatonin needs to be precise, since mistiming the dose can worsen rather than improve the jet lag symptoms. Persons who suffer from psychiatric problems or migraine headaches or who may be or intend to become pregnant should use melatonin with caution, if at all.

Zolpidem (Ambien) and Other Hypnotics

Zolpidem (10mg) has been shown as effective as melatonin alone or as melatonin/zolpidem in combination. Zolpidem should be used to induce sleep after arrival at the appropriate destination time-zone sleeping time, when the body is jet-lagged and cannot fall asleep. It can be used for up to 2 or 3 nights at each end of the trip. Zolpidem has a short half-life with no residual effect in the morning. Travelers should resist the temptation to sleep during the day the first few days at destination, since this will decrease the ability to sleep at night and prolong the adjustment cycle. Other short-active hypnotics have been recommended (zaleplon, temazepam, and triazolam) but have not been studied formally in the way that zolpidem has. Sedatives are no longer recommended on airline flights due to the risk of blood clots in the legs during prolonged immobility.

Other Ways to Reduce Jet Lag

Some ways of trying to reduce jet lag include the following:


  eHealth eZine - Your Daily Dose of Good Health -
 


Get your Daily dose of Good Health Absolutely Free. The eZine will keep you up-to-date on Health issues and will motivate you to Live a Happy Healthy Life. Additionally you will receive Great Health Freebies..

Name
E-mail ID
eZine

 

 
 
Site Map | About us | FAQ | Terms | Privacy | Disclaimer | Contact | Submit Article
© eHealth Treats - A Complete Resource for Good Health (2006-2007)
eHealth on