You love your ranch in Alberta but were long overdue for a big-city adventure—this time to New York City. On travel day, the flight was smooth.
You imagined seeing the skyscrapers, visiting museums, and maybe even going to a Broadway show.
But your bite of the Big Apple hasn't been so good. You can't sleep, you're tired, and your stomach is giving you problems.
You have jet lag.
Jet lag may make it hard for you to fall asleep, stay asleep, or stay awake during the day. Lack of sleep can make you feel tired or tense and make it hard for you to focus. You may feel weak, or you may lose your appetite. You may not be able to have a bowel movement (constipation), or you may have diarrhea.
The symptoms of jet lag take a few days to go away:3
Jet lag can happen to anyone. Your age, fitness, health, and how often you fly don't make a difference in whether you get it.
Symptoms of jet lag include:
All the answers are correct. Having sleep problems; feeling tired, tense, and unfocused; and not having an appetite are all symptoms of jet lag.
All the answers are correct. Having sleep problems; feeling tired, tense, and unfocused; and not having an appetite are all symptoms of jet lag.
All the answers are correct. Having sleep problems; feeling tired, tense, and unfocused; and not having an appetite are all symptoms of jet lag.
You may get jet lag when you fly across one or more time zones. This happens when you fly east to west or west to east. When you fly north to south or south to north, you don't cross time zones, so you don't get jet lag.
Crossing time zones disrupts your body's "biological clock," or 24-hour rhythms (circadian rhythms). You have symptoms because your biological clock has not adjusted to the new time zone. Your body thinks that you're still in your old time zone.
For example, if you fly from Winnipeg to Rome, you cross seven time zones. This means that Rome is 7 hours ahead of Winnipeg. When you land in Rome at 6:00 in the morning, your body thinks it's still in Winnipeg at 11:00 the previous night. Your body wants to sleep, but in Rome the day is just starting.
Other things besides your wake/sleep cycle are affected. You may not be hungry at dinnertime in Rome, but you may be very hungry in the middle of the day. Your bowel movements may be on a different schedule than normal.
As your body adjusts to the time change, the symptoms go away.
You can get jet lag when you:
When you take a long road trip, you may cross time zones. But the time it takes to cross them allows your body to adjust. You get jet lag when you cross time zones quickly, as you do in an airplane.
You can get jet lag when you fly across time zones. This happens when you fly east or west.
You can get jet lag when you fly east or west across time zones. When you fly north or south, you don't cross time zones.
You can't cure jet lag, but you may be able to reduce the symptoms using the hormone supplement melatonin and sleeping pills. Other treatments besides medicines have not been studied or have been studied very little, but they may be worth trying.
Melatonin is a hormone that your body makes. It regulates the cycle of sleeping and waking. Normally, melatonin levels begin to rise in the mid- to late evening, remain high for most of the night, and then go down early in the morning.
Taking melatonin may help "reset" your biological clock. Studies show that it has reduced the symptoms of jet lag for people flying both east and west.1
Suggestions about times and dosages vary among researchers who have studied melatonin. Doctors recommend that you:
The safety and effectiveness of melatonin have not been thoroughly tested. Taking large doses of it may cause sleep disruption and daytime fatigue. If you have epilepsy or are taking blood thinners such as coumadin (Warfarin), talk to your doctor before you use melatonin.
None of the things in the following lists have been proved to reduce jet lag, but some people find them helpful.
Before you go, and on the plane
When you arrive
If you have an important meeting or athletic event, try to arrive a few days early so your body can adjust to the new time zone.
Now that you have read this information, you may be able to reduce symptoms of jet lag. Talk to your doctor about other things you might be able to do.
Return to topic:
Citations
- Herxheimer A (2008). Jet lag, search date June 2008. Online version of BMJ Clinical Evidence: http://www.clinicalevidence.com.
- Herxheimer A, Petrie KJ (2002). Melatonin for the prevention and treatment of jet lag. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (2).
- Waterhouse J, et al. (2007). Jet lag: Trends and coping strategies. Lancet, 369(9567): 1117–1129.
Last Revised: June 7, 2010
Author: Healthwise Staff
Medical Review: E. Gregory Thompson, MD - Internal Medicine & Andrew Swan, MD, CCFP, FCFP - Family Medicine
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