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Celiac.com Celiac Disease & Gluten-Free Diet Forum: Jetlag! - Celiac.com Celiac Disease & Gluten-Free Diet Forum

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Jetlag! any suggestions to ease the transition? Rate Topic: -----

#1 User is offline   elye 

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Posted 11 May 2007 - 04:22 PM

I'm looking for advice on what I can take to help with jetlag. We are travelling to Europe in the summer, so I will be suddenly faced with a six hour time difference. Now, this will be bad enough for my diabetes control (timed injections and meals...things will be quite screwed up the first couple of days!), but I'm equally concerned about getting to sleep at the new time and not waking up at silly times, etc. I've heard good things about melatonin, but I'm not sure of how to take it...right before my new, temporary bed-time? Should I start taking it before we leave? Valerian has always worked for me on the odd night when sleep just won't come, as has coffea...any suggestions? (Can you tell I'm no world traveller...I've only done one time change before--three hours, to Vancouver--and it was very tough)!
Emily

diagnosed type one diabetic 1973
diagnosed celiac winter 2005
diagnosed hypothyroid spring 2006

But healthy and happy! Posted Image


11 year-old Son had negative blood panel, but went on gluten-free diet of his own volition to see if his concentration would improve, his temper abate, and his energy level would increase. Miraculous response!

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#2 User is online   Mango04 

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Posted 11 May 2007 - 04:51 PM

The best thing to do is drink LOTS of water before and during the flight. The one time I did that I hardly experienced any jet lag at all.
"Let food be thy medicine, and let thy medicine be food." - Hippocrates
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#3 User is offline   VydorScope 

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Posted 11 May 2007 - 05:03 PM

I always try to arrange travel so I sleep through the time change. It might take altering your schedule a bit before you leave, and short changing your self a bit on the sleep the day you travel but it does seem to help.
Vincent
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#4 User is offline   Fiddle-Faddle 

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Posted 11 May 2007 - 09:48 PM

Good advice above, and I would add that you MUST get outside as much as possible during daylight hours. Exposure to sunlight (or cloudlight or rainlight, whatever the weather!) is what will help your body reset its internal clock.

Naps during the day for the first couple of days are fine (heck, downright necessary), but be very careful not to nap more than 2 hours, or you will have major trouble sleeping at night. This will be very difficult, as your body will think that you've gone to bed for the night and will not want to get up, but drag yourself out of bed anyway and throw yourself in the shower.

You could try to be a hero and go without the nap for the first day, but in my experience, it turns out worse, because I could never stay awake the whole time, and would end up falling asleep during dinner, which (besides for being embarrassing) screwed up falling asleep at night.

For some reason, I have always found returning to the US to be much more difficult jet-lag-wise than leaving the US, but I don't know why.

Good luck!
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#5 User is offline   elye 

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Posted 12 May 2007 - 10:49 AM

Great suggestions, everyone. Our flight is six hours, and we leave at 7:30 pm. I guess I'll take a valerian once we're in the air (I can NEVER sleep on planes!) and maybe get up extra early that morning so I'll be tired...I drink a ton of water normally, so extra water will be no problem. I may have to do my morning injection at 4 am for the last couple of days here... :blink:
Emily

diagnosed type one diabetic 1973
diagnosed celiac winter 2005
diagnosed hypothyroid spring 2006

But healthy and happy! Posted Image


11 year-old Son had negative blood panel, but went on gluten-free diet of his own volition to see if his concentration would improve, his temper abate, and his energy level would increase. Miraculous response!

The great are great only because we are on our knees.
--Pierre Joseph Proudhon (1809-1865)
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