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Jet Lag Susceptibility
  Jet Lag, Tendency Towards
 Treatment recommendations
 


Alternative Names: Jet-lag, Jetlag, Desynchronosis, Dysrhythmia, Dyschrony, or Jet Syndrome.

Jet Lag comes as a consequence of alterations to the circadian rhythm that result from shift work, daylight saving time, altered day length, or long-distance journeys by aircraft across several time zones. The condition is generally believed to be the result of disruption of the "light/dark" cycle that governs the body's circadian rhythm, and can be exacerbated by environmental factors.
If you are frequently changing time zones or working long and/or varying hours or shifts, you start working at only 60 to 70% of your potential until jet lag has been overcome. You lose concentration, judgement, and reaction time.

Jet lag is not linked to the length of flight in hours, but to the transmeridian (i.e. longitudinal or east-west) distance traveled. For example, a ten-hour flight between Frankfurt and Johannesburg (going south, staying roughly on the same meridian) is unlikely to cause jet lag compared with a five-hour flight between New York and Los Angeles (going west three time zones).

There seems to be some evidence that traveling west to east is more disruptive, or runs counter to the circadian rhythm. Different individuals may find one adjustment easier than the other.

Note that there is a big difference between a -6 and a +6 hours jet lag, there is relatively small difference between -11 and +11 hours. Crossing the International Date Line does not affect jet lag in itself.

Causes & Development


When traveling across a number of time zones, one's body clock loses its synchronization with the local time. The same happens when changing from a day shift to a night shift at work, for example. The result is that we experience daytime and nighttime contrary to the rhythms to which we have been accustomed. This natural pattern is upset as our needs for eating and sleeping no longer correspond our environment.

Jet lag occurs because the body cannot automatically realign these rhythms. The speed at which the body readjusts itself to new daylight and darkness hours, and eating and sleeping patterns, is entirely dependent upon the individual. Thus, while it may take little or no time for some people to readjust to a new time zone, others seem to experience significant disruption to their body's natural sleeping pattern.

Signs & Symptoms
The symptoms of jet lag are varied but commonly include:
  • Dehydration and loss of appetite
  • Headaches and/or sinus irritation
  • Fatigue
  • Disorientation and/or grogginess
  • Nausea and/or upset stomach
  • Insomnia and/or highly irregular sleep patterns
  • Irritability and/or irrationality.
Jet lag, when present, generally lasts a few days.

Treatment & Prevention
The experience of jet lag varies among different individuals, so it is difficult to assess the efficacy of any single remedy. Exposure to sunlight may be a factor to reset the body's clock. Sleep, relaxation, moderate exercise, and sensible diet seem to be the simplest recovery methods.

For occasional flights, it can be an effective non-drug remedy to skip sleep entirely for one night and one day and then go to bed at a normal destination-area bedtime. It may even work better not to sleep the night before the flight. These tactics allow a relatively quick recovery for many people.

Most chemical and herbal remedies are not tested or approved by the Food and Drug Administration.

Prevention of Jet Lag can be simple: good sleep while aboard a plane and an adequate intake of fluids (without excessive amounts of caffeine or alcohol) to reduce the effects of dehydration and the interruption of regular eating/drinking patterns. Seasoned travelers set their clock to the destination time zone, as soon as it is practical, and join the new rhythm.





Recommendations and treatments for Jet Lag Susceptibility:
Hormone  Melatonin


KEY
Highly recommended


GLOSSARY

Herbs (Herb, Herbal)
Herbs may be used as dried extracts (capsules, powders, teas), glycerites (glycerine extracts), or tinctures (alcohol extracts). Unless otherwise indicated, teas should be made with one teaspoon herb per cup of hot water. Steep covered 5 to 10 minutes for leaf or flowers, and 10 to 20 minutes for roots. Tinctures may be used singly or in combination as noted. The high doses of single herbs suggested may be best taken as dried extracts (in capsules), although tinctures (60 drops four times per day) and teas (4 to 6 cups per day) may also be used.

Nausea
Symptoms resulting from an inclination to vomit.

Sinuses (Sinus)
Four pairs of air pockets lined with membranes in the bones around the nose. The ethmoid sinuses are located on each side of the nose between the eyes; the maxillary sinuses are located in the cheek above the teeth and below the eyes; the sphenoid sinuses are located deeply behind the eyes; the frontal sinuses are located in the forehead.

Stomach
A hollow, muscular, J-shaped pouch located in the upper part of the abdomen to the left of the midline. The upper end (fundus) is large and dome-shaped; the area just below the fundus is called the body of the stomach. The fundus and the body are often referred to as the cardiac portion of the stomach. The lower (pyloric) portion curves downward and to the right and includes the antrum and the pylorus. The function of the stomach is to begin digestion by physically breaking down food received from the esophagus. The tissues of the stomach wall are composed of three types of muscle fibers: circular, longitudinal and oblique. These fibers create structural elasticity and contractibility, both of which are needed for digestion. The stomach mucosa contains cells which secrete hydrochloric acid and this in turn activates the other gastric enzymes pepsin and rennin. To protect itself from being destroyed by its own enzymes, the stomach’s mucous lining must constantly regenerate itself.




Last updated: Sep 28, 2008


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