ZOE Science & Nutrition - Fix your body clock to improve long term health with Prof. Satchin Panda

Episode Date: June 20, 2024

Our modern lifestyles mean that most of us don’t live our lives in sync with our circadian rhythms, which puts our health and well-being at risk. Eating and sleeping at the right time are important ...tools to help us align our circadian rhythms and reduce our risk of chronic disease.  In this episode, circadian rhythm expert Prof. Satchin Panda will tell us how light and food act as master regulators of our body clock, how aligning our lifestyles with our body clock can improve our health, mood and energy levels and how to do this in practice.  Satchin is a world-leading expert in the field of circadian rhythm research. He’s associate professor at the prestigious SALK institute, he’s recipient of the Dana Foundation Award in brain and immune system imaging and he’s also the author of two best-selling books, The Circadian Code and The Circadian Diabetes Code. Learn how your body responds to food 👉 zoe.com/podcast for 10% off 🌱 Try our new plant based wholefood supplement - Daily 30 *Naturally high in copper which contributes to normal energy yielding metabolism and the normal function of the immune system Timecodes: 00:00 Introduction 01:00 Quickfire questions 03:02 What are circadian rhythms? 03:48 How do we know about circadian rhythms? 04:44 Are all body parts on a 24 hour clock? 06:40 How the body enters sleep mode 09:25 What happens during sleep? 12:08 Why you’re not sleeping enough 13:30 The surprising impact of daylight savings time 17:00 Circadian rhythms aren’t just about light 19:55 The dangers of shift work 21:20 Should you go to bed at sunset? 25:40 Why should stop snacking at night 26:10 Satchin’s famous mice study 33:00 The best eating window for health 37:27 Does intermittent fasting promote better food choices? 40:40 Should you drink black coffee when you wake up?   Satchin’s books: The Circadian Code  The Circadian Diabetes Code Books by our ZOE Scientists: Every Body Should Know This by Dr Federica Amati Food For Life by Prof. Tim Spector Fibre Fuelled by Dr Will Bulsiewicz Studies referenced in today’s episode:  Effects of 3 months of 10-h per-day time-restricted eating and 3 months of follow-up on bodyweight and cardiometabolic health in Danish individuals at high risk of type 2 diabetes: the RESET single-centre, parallel, superiority, open-label, randomised controlled trial, published in Lancet Healthy Longevity Neuronal reprogramming of mouse and human fibroblasts using transcription factors involved in suprachiasmatic nucleus development, published iScience Learning from circadian rhythm to transform cancer prevention, prognosis, and survivorship care, published in Trends Cancer The Untapped Potential of Circadian Timing as a Variable for Discoveries and Reproducibility, published in Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepato Follow ZOE on Instagram Have feedback or a topic you'd like us to cover? Let us know here. Episode transcripts are available here.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to ZOE, Science and Nutrition, where world-leading scientists explain how their research can improve your health. Today you'll hear from one of the world's foremost scientists on why living in harmony with your body clock is critical for your long-term health. Professor Sachin Panda is here to reveal why our body clots govern so much more than just how groggy we are when we wake up. Sachin is a highly cited professor at the renowned Salk Institute in California and a best-selling author. He studies circadian rhythms,
Starting point is 00:00:40 their regulation and their impact on our health. Today, we hear how to harness these powerful invisible rhythms to increase our resilience to chronic disease. At Satchin, we have a tradition here at Zoe where we always start with a quick fire round of questions from our listeners and we have some strict rules. You can give us a yes or a no or if you absolutely have to you can give us a one sentence answer we know that's hard for
Starting point is 00:01:12 professors but they mainly manage it are you willing to give it a try sure wonderful does every part of our body follow a 24-hour cycle yes Can eating breakfast at the wrong time wreak havoc on my circadian rhythm? I'm going to explain what is the wrong time because breakfast is not the morning meal. It's breaking the fast, which has to be consistent. If I live my life out of rhythm with my body clock, can I damage my health? Yes. If I adjust my lifestyle to match my circadian rhythms, can my health improve in just weeks? Yes. That wasn't so bad, was it?
Starting point is 00:01:50 So now final question, and you can have a whole sentence. What's the biggest misconception that you hear about the body clock? That people have very different types of clock, which is not true. Everybody has the same 24 hours clock. So look, Sachin, I think most people listening to this podcast have heard of the body clock or circadian rhythms.
Starting point is 00:02:11 And intuitively, they know that if that body clock is disrupted, you know, they don't feel great. I think any of us who have had, you know, children know what it's like to suddenly have your sleep broken or suddenly to be on weird cycles. I think many people like me have had experience of jet lag, where you go and move to, you know, a country that's a long way west or east, and then it's very difficult for a few days. But I was always brought up to understand that it's just really mainly about sort of adjusting your sleep pattern after this transatlantic flight or making sure that, you know, the sort of thing I always say to my son, which bores him, which is he's a teenager, oh, you should go to bed at a regular time and wake up at a regular time. That's the sort of
Starting point is 00:02:53 thing that my mother used to say to me. But I think there's a lot more science that's been happening in recent years, and you're one of the leading researchers in the field. I'd actually love to start before we dig into how it impacts our health, just to understand a little bit about like, what are circadian rhythms and how do they work? Yeah, circadian rhythms literally mean 24 hours rhythms. So that means these are the internal timetables that are present in every organ, actually in every cell in our body, that tells each of our hormones, brain chemicals, digestive juice, enzymes, or even every single gene to turn on and off at a specific time of the day or night. How do you know now that this exists and is in every cell?
Starting point is 00:03:43 Is this something that we've known forever or is this relatively new? Almost 25 years ago, scientists figured this out. They developed a new way to monitor circadian clock or 24-hour clock in individual cells. And what is interesting is if I take a chick swab or my skin cells and then put a magical gene that's from firefly into it, then the cell will glow and dim down in every 24 hours. And that's how scientists came to know that almost every cell in our body, including our skin, our fibroblasts, for example, even hair follicles, all of them have circadian clock. And does that mean, cause you might imagine that maybe the cells are in a 24 hour cycle,
Starting point is 00:04:33 but it doesn't really matter somehow for when they get turned into, I don't know, a particular, like your heart or your brain or whatever. Is it true that all the parts of our body are also on these 24-hour cycles? Or, I mean, my heart is working, after all, all the time. It doesn't switch off. So is it only, is that on a 24-hour cycle? Yeah, actually, the heart beats 24 hours. But what is interesting is when we sleep, the heart actually slows down slightly. And then anticipating waking up, it begins to beat slightly faster. And you might say, well, this is a small change of heartbeat.
Starting point is 00:05:14 Does it matter? And actually it does matter because there are many cases when your heart doesn't slow down at night, doesn't rest, because just like we, our brain needs rest, our heart also needs some rest, those people have a higher risk for heart disease in future. So it's pretty well documented for blood pressure also. So for example, our blood pressure dips at night, and there are many individuals who have high blood pressure, and their blood pressure doesn't dip at night, versus there are some people who have high blood pressure and their blood pressure doesn't dip at night. Versus there are some people who have high blood pressure, but their pressure actually
Starting point is 00:05:49 dips slightly at night. And there are a lot of studies showing that non-dipping blood pressure actually has higher risk for heart disease in the future than dipping blood pressure. So you can have high blood pressure, but if still your blood pressure still follows a circadian rhythm, then that reduces, that has a less risk for future heart attack. And so Sachin, both those examples you give
Starting point is 00:06:17 are sort of things that are sort of slowing down or changing during nighttime. And it makes me think about, you know, we're all very familiar with sort of like the sleep mode on our phone or our computer, right? Where there's a sort of energy saving when it's not needed. Is this 24 hour cycle all about switching things off when I should be asleep? Or do we know why it's there? And is there like a simple answer across everything? Well, there are many things that go on in our cell, individual cells. For example, our cell
Starting point is 00:06:49 has to take nutrition in, produce energy, and during energy production, there is some reactive oxygen species. So these are the byproducts of metabolism that are quite toxic to the cell. And similarly, there are many chemicals that are also produced during metabolism. You can say toxin or unwanted chemicals, they have to be cleaned up. And that cleaning up doesn't happen 24-7, just like your garbage truck doesn't come 24-7, it comes at a specific time of the morning. Similarly, when we sleep, that's the time when
Starting point is 00:07:25 actually our body repairs itself, gets rid of the toxin. And it's not that the whole body is slowing down. Actually, the recycling, the rejuvenation, the repair process actually turn on during that time. Got it. So my analogy was a really poor analogy. It's not that it's going to sleep. It's more like saying, hey, hey we're switching over i've heard tim give this analogy it's like the night crew is coming in and doing all of this cleaning and work so actually lots of activity but the point is they can't come in if like the daytime people are doing all their normal activity so it's actually about shifting to a different set of processes inside us. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:11 So that's why if the cleaning crew doesn't come in at nighttime and repair all the damages, then next day you'll have a crappy day. You better be as productive at work as you would be if the offices are clean and everything is nice for you to begin. So the same thing happens in our body. When our circadian rhythms are disrupted, then this repair and rejuvenation cycle is dampened or disrupted. And slowly the body accumulates a lot of these unwanted chemicals. And if it happens in the heart, then that can lead to increased risk for heart disease. If it happens in the gut or the digestive system, then that can lead to digestive issues or even in some cases, in extreme cases, cancer of the digestive tract, colon cancer, etc. I'm sort of curious with the overlap between
Starting point is 00:08:56 the circadian rhythm and sleep because, you know, we associate also obviously this cycle at night time with going to sleep and you're describing it as also this period when all of this rest and repair happens but sleep is obviously not something that's in every single cell how should we think about these two fitting are they completely separate are they almost the same well sleep is a very different state during our sleep a lot of things are happening our body temperature are happening. Your body temperature cools down. Your core body temperature cools down and actually peripheral skin temperature slightly goes up. Your digestive system also slows down or almost shuts down. Your breathing slows down.
Starting point is 00:09:38 So sleep is not necessarily a function of the brain. It's actually a function of the entire body. Your muscle tone also goes down because you don't want to dream walk or sleep walk. And so Sachin, I'd love to transition to this topic about how all of this impacts our health as human beings. So I think you've explained the circadian rhythm is there in all of these individual cells, how is that impacting our health as a result? So let's start with a few things that usually happen in our normal lives. One is, just like when you have a watch, you can anticipate what's going to happen. So for example, if your office starts at 8 o'clock, then in our 7.30 or 7.15, you know that the traffic will be 30 minutes. Whether you're taking a bus, train, or driving, it will take 30 minutes.
Starting point is 00:10:34 So at 7.15, you are getting ready. Just imagine, if you didn't have a clock, then you'd wait till 8 o'clock, close to eight o'clock, seeing other people driving to work or moving towards work, then you'll start and then you'll be late to your office and when you're late then it doesn't do well on your performance. So one function of circadian clock is actually prepares us for what is going to happen next. So for example, early in the morning, as I mentioned, one or two hours before we wake up, our sleep hormone, melatonin, is already on decline. So it's making sure that we don't feel sleepy
Starting point is 00:11:19 when we are ready to wake up. We breathe slightly more, and then our body temperature begins to rise all of these preparations are happening in anticipating you wake up which is very different from the way that you feel isn't it because the way it feels particularly when your alarm clock goes off is like oh i was in such deep sleep i've got to drag myself out but it's interesting and i i've seen this similarly when you wear a um like a blood sugar sensor interestingly you see this also i've seen this myself in my blood sugar that like i feel like
Starting point is 00:11:49 i'm dragged out of bed but actually interestingly you know i've seen that my blood sugar has tended to go up maybe for like an hour or two i think beforehand so what you're saying is my body knows a lot that my brain doesn't so So my brain is complaining, but somehow my body already sort of knew where I was going to be. Actually, what happens is when you have to wake up to alarm clock, that is a sign that you haven't slept enough. You are waking up one or two hours before your body is supposed to wake up. By that time, your body is not prepared. You're trying to drag yourself out of bed.
Starting point is 00:12:26 Then the question is, so what harm is there? And actually for most of us, just imagine if you have a new car, even if you do bad driving, it's not going to affect your performance. But if you have a really old, cranky car and you are doing bad driving it's going to show up the engine might give up this is exactly what happens and we have seen this experiment done
Starting point is 00:12:52 over last hundred years all over the world when there is a daylight saving time or twice a year the time changes and at least in fall when when the time actually falls back, so that means you have to wake up an hour earlier than the previous night. That morning, a lot of people, millions of people are waking up when their body is not ready yet. It's just one hour change. And that's the time when we see there is a spike in heart attack in the morning. There's a spike in heart attacks on the day of daylight saving. That's amazing and terrifying. And also that happens to the older individuals, but then those who have a weaker heart. There's also the day when there's a spike in road accident in the morning. Because even young adults and middle-aged adults who are driving, their brain is not ready enough to do that very complicated calculations.
Starting point is 00:13:54 Because when you're driving, your brain is doing a lot of calculations. At what speed you are going, you're guessing what's the speed of the car in front of you, on the side, when you're changing lanes. And you really see that in like the total statistics in the States, there are like more road accidents the following day than across all the other days. Yeah. And also, if you just look at heart attack incidences that are reported to emergency room, this is again, data from last 30, 40 years, showing that even on a daily basis, there is a spike in heart attack only in the morning
Starting point is 00:14:27 because that's when the heart has to start pumping slightly faster than in the nighttime. And this is when there is a higher incidence of heart attack. So you're giving that as an example where if your body had time to prepare, then it's less likely, but because suddenly it's like, I'm getting up, I need to walk around. And presumably these are people whose hearts are not in very good shape. It's like too big a shock.
Starting point is 00:14:51 And you're saying there was a heart attack, whereas if this body clock had been able to prepare you, then you would have been okay. Yeah. So this is an example of anticipation. Your body, your circadian clock is anticipating waking up and preparing you. So the other thing is to do two different things at two different separate time of the day because you cannot do those two things together.
Starting point is 00:15:15 Just like you mentioned, like the custodial staff or the cleaning crew comes late at night or very early in the morning cleans up the office. And you cannot have the cleaning crew coming in when you're in the middle of a meeting during the daytime. Hi, I'm Zoe's US Medical Director, Dr. Will Bolsowicz, and I'm excited to tell you about a free resource that's going to kickstart your journey to better gut health. If you're a regular listener, you probably already know how a healthy gut microbiome is important for digestion, immune support, and mental well-being, and that a high-fiber diet is a great way to improve your gut health. But where to start? And what exactly does a high-fiber shopping list look like? With 95% of U.S. adults deficient in
Starting point is 00:16:02 fiber, clearly this is not common knowledge. Zoe's Gut Guide has the answers. To get yours for free, simply go to zoe.com slash gut guide and start feeling the benefits of a healthier gut today. Help us understand, what does that mean? Like what needs to stop in order for this other thing to start that actually matters for our health? So almost in every cell, there are many chemical reactions that are going on.
Starting point is 00:16:32 One type of chemical reaction, what we call oxidative process. So that means this is a process where oxygen is used to typically break down things. For example, when we are breaking down fat and making ketone bodies, these are the small tiny fat-like molecules which have a lot of benefits. That's one kind of process. But then the fifth side of that process is making fat. When we eat, a small part of our nutrient that we eat is actually used to make fat. And this breaking fat and making fat cannot occur at the same time. And they are
Starting point is 00:17:10 temporarily or timely, they are separated to two different times of the day. Similarly, there are also many other examples where the body is programming ourselves or the circadian clock is programming our cells to do certain things that are safer to do at night. And one example is when should our cells divide? Our skin actually repairs itself or recycles itself roughly in every 15 to 30 days. So that means we have new skin every 15 to 30 days. Similarly, our gut lining also changes every 15 to 30 days. Similarly, our gut lining also changes in 15 to 20 days. Obviously, we talk about gut and gut health quite a lot on this show. There's no sunlight inside. So what's happening to the, why is the gut cells on some
Starting point is 00:17:57 sort of 24-hour cycle? Well, there are a lot of things that we eat, those are not actually nutritious. There are many toxins, and they also damage our gut lining. And just like you cannot repair a highway when the traffic is still flowing, you cannot repair the gut lining when you're still digesting food. So that's why the gut lining also repairs itself at nighttime. And at nighttime, the movement of food through the gut, that also slows down. So all of this helps to repair the gut. So now imagine if someone is a shift worker, or if you have a jet lag, you flew from London to California, and you thought this is sunny day, let me go lie on the
Starting point is 00:18:39 beach. But actually your skin cells are dividing because they're still in London time. Unless you have enough sunscreen, you are actually at a high risk for certain damage to your skin. So this is another example where circadian clock not only times things to keep us safe within our body, it also times our activities in a way that it's safe from damaging effect of UV light from the sun. And then the third one is pretty obvious that the compatible processes, things that should happen, that can happen together, actually happen together. So for example, we are more active during daytime and we are more likely to have access to food. So it's very obvious that most people feel hungry in four to five hours during daytime, and they can eat.
Starting point is 00:19:28 And the pancreas is also trying to produce more insulin during our wakeful time than in our sleep time. Our digestion is also programmed to be more optimum during our wakeful time. So these are the compatible processes that are aligned together. A lot of people listening are saying, yeah, that sounds really good. I'm not sure that my lifestyle is actually that in line with my circadian rhythm. You know, I know that every morning during the week, I wake up much earlier than I really want to. And I know that, you know, I'm a great example of this.
Starting point is 00:20:03 I sort of know I'm not supposed to snack after dinner, but I can tell you last night I was watching Netflix at about 10pm thinking about this show as I ate my dark chocolate because I'm really addicted to it, thinking that you were going to tell me today that I was naughty. So like we're, many of us in our modern life, right, because of electric lights, all these things, you know, we're not living sort of just in line with this cycle. How significant can the impact on our health be? There are three or four different lines of studies to kick it out, what happens if we don't pay attention to circadian rhythms. The first one I would say is epidemiological study or looking at what happens to people who do evening shift or night shift work. Are they at a higher risk for certain disease than people of the same age and gender who are
Starting point is 00:20:53 not doing night shift work or evening shift work? Nearly one-fifth of the population in many industrialized countries work in shift, and nearly one-fourth to one-third of the population in many developing countries work in shift. So there are a lot of people. And how big is that impact on your health if you're doing these night shifts? It's very clear that shift workers are at a high risk for metabolic disease, whether it's obesity, diabetes, heart disease, vascular disease, kidney disease, all of these diseases. They're also at a high risk for many types of cancer, to the extent that World Health Organization categorized night shift work as a potential carcinogen. It's similar to chemicals that are known to cause cancer.
Starting point is 00:21:45 And Sachin, is it only shift workers who need to worry about this or for the rest of us who are lucky enough that they're not having to work in the middle of the night, but they're still probably not following a real cycle? I could tell you that I am definitely not going to bed when it goes dark outside. Is there any real risks or not? Yeah, we don't have to go to bed right after sunset. I mean, there are researchers who have gone to populations which don't have access to electricity or very minimum amount of electricity, and they find that these populations still stay awake in the evening. They have a candlelight or firelight, and they go to sleep between 9.30 and 10.30 p.m.
Starting point is 00:22:27 and then wake up around 6 a.m. or around dawn. So it's not that we have to fall asleep as soon as it becomes dark. But now the point is, well, if you're not a shift worker, should you worry about it? And the answer is, well, you may not be a card-carrying shift worker, but are you
Starting point is 00:22:46 living the lifestyle of a shift worker? And that brings up the question of, okay, so what is the lifestyle of a shift worker or what is typically defined as shift work? There is no internationally recognized rule about what is defined as shift work, but there are many European countries who roughly define shift work as staying awake for two or more hours between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m. and engaged in some physical activity or mental activity. It's not that you are lying in the dark room and you cannot sleep for three to four hours. That's not sleep work. But you have to be awake and be active and engaged in some kind of work. So now just imagine how many people stay awake for two or more hours between 10 p.m. and
Starting point is 00:23:40 5 a.m. A lot of people. What it really means is, are you reducing your sleep by roughly two hours for 50 days in a year? So that is once a week. So it's pretty easy to achieve is basically the message you're describing. Like, you know, just the weekend decided to stay up late, or staying up one night during the week late or any of these things, you know, can have that impact very fast. I think you've painted the picture about like why this is really important, and that there's real health risks if you're not there. I guess I'd love to talk about, okay, the practical tips for somebody listening to this about ways that they can adjust their lifestyle. And I'm particularly interested in
Starting point is 00:24:25 food and sleep that our listeners could actually take. And I think I'd love to start with time restricted eating. And that is in part because I have to admit, I was very skeptical about this just a couple of years ago. And when I first heard about it, it sounded pretty crazy. It was like, oh, you know, it's another one of these fads that somebody's come up with and just like, you know, drinking cauliflower soup. It's like, it doesn't make any sense. But actually, Zoe did a huge study last year, which was called the Big If Study with around 37,000 people, because it's something Tim and Sarah were really interested in, because I think of research like your own. And what was really striking was, you know, on this very large sample of people, there was a real impact on energy and hunger after just a few weeks of making this adjustment, which was, I was really surprised by. So I've had
Starting point is 00:25:17 to accept there's definitely something, there's something around this. So could you tell us about, you know, based on your own research and the other researchers out there, what does all this circadian rhythm tell us about when we should eat? So there are two fundamental discoveries about what resets or synchronizes our circadian rhythms. What is light, the daylight or light that is rich in blue light that goes through our eyes and resets our brain clock and resets when we sleep, when we wake up. So that light is one cue. But the other cue is when we eat. If we eat at the wrong time, like one night if you are eating very late into the night, then that night, your body clock gets confused, thinking, huh, was it a delayed dinner
Starting point is 00:26:09 or was it an early breakfast? And for the next few days, it gets confused. So all the body clock, the clocks in the liver, gut, heart, kidney, all of those clocks get disrupted so they can't work pretty well. So just a late night can mess up all, and it's not even just my gut, it can even mess up my liver or my heart. That doesn't sound good as someone who has a tendency to maybe have that little snack before bedtime. Yeah, because your body is thinking, well,
Starting point is 00:26:40 was it evening? Was it a long, was it a late dinner? So after we learned this, then the question was, well, we know that having a strong circadian clock is good for health. In modern life, it's very hard to control light exposure because from morning till night and also late into the night until we close our eyes, we're always exposed to light. It's very difficult to control that. But can we control when we eat? And just by when we eat, can we change health? So, you know, what is now popular as time-restricted eating or intermittent, very popular form of intermittent fasting, it was not there 12 years ago. So my lab was the first one to do this experiment in mice, just like all basic scientists do, because we can control the experiment pretty well, and we can also do
Starting point is 00:27:33 molecular analysis. So we took two groups of young mice, and they were identical in genes. They were born from the same parents, grew up in the same room. They had the same microbiome. They ate the same number of calories from the same food. The food we gave them was relatively high in fat and carbohydrate, which would be equivalent to eating, say, fish and chips every day or a burger every day. you know, all the bad food you can think of. Not the healthiest diet for a mouse or a human being. We knew that when mice are given this kind of food and they're allowed to eat whatever they want to eat,
Starting point is 00:28:16 they become very obese, diabetic, they have high risk for cardiovascular disease and also the increased risk for liver disease and cancer. This is from 100,000, sorry, 10,000 experiments that were done before we did the experiment. And they get the same number of calories also, but the first group was allowed to eat whenever they want and the second group was allowed to eat
Starting point is 00:28:40 within the eight hour window during nighttime when they're supposed to eat. Mice are night active, so we get the food at nighttime. And within three days, these mice will learn that the food is available only for eight hours. So they eat the same number of calories within that eight hours as the mice that had access to food 24 hours. So very simple experiment.
Starting point is 00:29:03 We monitor their food every single week to make sure that both groups are eating the same number of calories. And we weighed them every single week. And at the end of 18 weeks, there was this huge surprise that the first group of mice that ate around the clock as expected,
Starting point is 00:29:20 they were obese, diabetic, they had high cholesterol, liver disease, all the bad things happened to them. Well, the second group, a date within eight hours, surprisingly, miraculously, they were completely healthy. Which is crazy, right? You're saying they ate the same amount of food, the same type of food, and just by restricting their eating to eight hours, they managed to deal with this unhealthy diet whereas the ones that could graze whenever ended up getting really obese we repeated this experiment with four three independent researchers in the lab who did not even overlap with each other to make sure that
Starting point is 00:29:58 this is true because think about it over the last 150 years of nutrition research, we know that what we eat is important because we have to eat healthy diet. There is no doubt about it. How much we eat is also important because there is a rich literature of almost 100 years showing that reducing food intake improves health. And in many laboratory animals, animals at least it increases longevity. And I think this is a fascinating discovery and you should feel really proud. Sachin, I would love to take this now, you know, for our listeners who's like you've painted this incredibly powerful picture of the mice but of course none of our listeners are mice, I don't think any of our listeners are
Starting point is 00:30:42 mice, so if you're a human being listening to this um you know and a number of our listeners will also have heard that you know my studies don't always you know translate fully to human beings what does the evidence say today what would your advice be for someone who's saying well what does that mean about how long should i be not eating for during each day? Okay, so the first thing is, what is actually considered food? Because a long time, even for my mouse study, I was not getting funding. So the normal criticism I would get is, well, people eat three square meals within 10 to 12 hours. So your findings have no human health implications. Then we started looking into
Starting point is 00:31:27 when people actually eat. And we know that we eat at different time on different days. And sometimes just like we wake up late in the weekend, those who are working a normal day shift, they also wake up slightly later in the weekend. We also change our breakfast time. We change our dinner time. And to our surprise, until 2014, 2015, there was not even a single study that objectively showed when people eat from one day to another for a complete one week. And we thought that, well, we have to do this experiment. So we had 156 people doing this for
Starting point is 00:32:06 three weeks and we said just take picture of everything even glass of water whatever you're doing so we went through the pictures to make sure that we discount all the water and low calorie non-caloric food and what we found was less than 10 percent of people actually eat or drink all their energy-containing food and beverages within 12 hours, punless. Less than 10% in your study? Yeah. And these people, none of them was a shift worker. These are all nine to five regular job, people who do regular job or who are homemaker at home. And at the beginning of the study, we had actually asked them, when do you think you eat? And almost 90% of them had answered that they eat all their food within 12 hours. So here's a disconnect between when people think they're eating versus when
Starting point is 00:32:58 they're actually eating. We have about 150,000 people who are ZOE members now. And, you know, as part of this, they're locking their food. And we similarly see, firstly, there's a lot of variability, as you say, and secondly, that there's a lot of activity generally in the evening, because it might be I'm going to have, I think I've finished my food, but then maybe I can have a glass of wine later in the evening, for example, or, you know, I'm going to have a snack that I don't really think about because that's just like a snack. It's not planned. So what is your best view today about if someone's listening to this and saying, you know what, I'm currently not eating all my food within even 12 hours. Sachin's saying this is really bad. What do you feel the data suggests at the moment that someone should be thinking about is the right way to manage their, you know,
Starting point is 00:33:45 the duration when they should be eating and then fasting? Yeah, so what I say is almost anyone from 10-year-old to 100-year-old can and should eat all their food within a 12-hour window. So whether you're healthy, unhealthy, you should be eating within 12 hours. The reason is even after your last meal, your stomach and the digestive system takes another five hours to digest that food completely, absorb all the nutrients. So although your mouth finished doing its job, your stomach is still working for extra four to five hours. So only after four to five hours, it's getting a little bit of rest. So even if you're eating for 12 hours, your body is getting only seven hours of rest from food. Then the question
Starting point is 00:34:31 is, well, if someone has high blood pressure or prediabetes, for example, or moderately high level of cholesterol, many of these risk factors, then what can they do? So this is where it becomes a little bit difficult because those who are headstrong and can eat everything within, say, six, eight, nine hours, then they can do, and they might see a lot of benefits. And so far, what we are seeing is there are many studies, not only from our lab, from many other labs, when people reduce their eating window by three or more hours. So this is where it becomes a little tricky. So for example, if you are consistently eating from, say, six o'clock, you get up, and then by 6.30, you have your tea with cream and sugar,
Starting point is 00:35:22 or a biscuit or something else, and that before going to bed at nine o'clock or eight o'clock you have some snack then it's already pretty big so if you reduce your eating window by three or more hours and it's not less than eight hours so then you'll actually begin to see a lot of benefits first thing is many people who do this, they say that within a couple of weeks their sleep improves. They can sleep much better at night and then next day they feel more energetic. And then those who have a high blood sugar, blood pressure or cholesterol over three to six months, they do see improvement in at least one of these parameters. Hi, I have a small favor to ask. We want this podcast to reach as many people as possible as we continue our mission to improve the health of millions. And watching this show grow is what
Starting point is 00:36:15 motivates the whole team at Zoe to keep up the really hard work of creating new episodes each week. So right now, if you could share a link to the show with one friend who would benefit from today's information, it would mean a great deal to me. Thank you. And Sachin, I've met some people who are saying, hey, I'm doing time-restricted eating. It's fantastic. Therefore, I can sort of eat what I want within this period as long as I'm restricting the time. That's the key. Now, it's not going to surprise you that as Zoe, we're pretty skeptical about this, but what's your view? Can you solve your health problem with the time-restricted eating without changing what you eat?
Starting point is 00:36:58 What we find is people actually do time-restricted eating or interval-time fasting, and at the same time, they improve their nutrition in an interesting way. So let's begin with what happens in real life. So those who are trying to do eight hours time-restricted eating or 10 hours time-restricted eating, they're going through 16 hours or 14 hours of fast over and over. And after this long fast, when they're breaking the fast, they tend to eat a bigger breakfast because they're so hungry after 16 hours of fasting. And typically breakfast is, for many people, not for all, breakfast is the healthiest meal of their day because that's when they have complete control over the food. They're at home, they can control what they eat.
Starting point is 00:37:42 And since most of us know that healthy food is good, so a healthy breakfast begins their day. And what we see is they also reduce snacking. So there is less snacking between breakfast and lunch, and also between lunch and dinner. So in that way, they reduce their food intake from snacks, which are mostly not so nutritious food. Even if you are eating a protein bar that has a lot of sugar. Then what happens is those who are finishing their eatings before 8 p.m., whether 5, 6, 7 or 8, and since kitchen closed, the bar also closed, so they also reduce their alcohol intake. And this is what we specifically saw in one study with firefighter study. We saw that those who reported drinking alcohol at baseline at the beginning of
Starting point is 00:38:32 the study, they significantly reduced their alcohol intake if they were in the time-restricted eating group. So these are different ways people actually inadvertently improve their nutrition. So you're saying often they combine the time-restricted eating actually not with making their diet worse but making their diet better in part because it's like well I'm really hungry and I've got control because I've got my breakfast and also because I'm gonna not eat a lot of these like bad snacks at bad times or whatever. I know that this is still an area of very early research and it's something where Zoe is actually, you know, very involved as well because it's so interesting. Right now, you mentioned that almost everybody should be trying to restrict their eating to within 12
Starting point is 00:39:16 hours. What is your view about the added health benefit of restricting that to 10 or 8? So those who are current eating habit is 12 hours. If they reduce it to 8 hours, they will see benefit. And those who are current eating habit spreads over 14 or longer hours, if they reduce it to 10 hours, we also see health benefits. So the bottom line is if you can do 8 hours, it's better. 10 hours is not that bad. And 12 hours, you should do in maintenance more because once you're healthy and if you're athletic, if you're doing a lot of physical activity, or for example, those who had a baby recently who cannot fast for a very long time for obvious reasons, they can still try to eat within 12
Starting point is 00:40:06 hours. So that's why I say there is no single hard and fast rule. Brilliant. Well, thank you for answering that. I have one final question, which we get a lot. Is drinking tea or coffee outside of this window sort of breaking it or acceptable? Yes, tea or coffee, in one of the studies with firefighters, we actually allowed them to have black coffee and tea outside the window because they're finishing their shift after 24 hours in the morning. So we want them to be alerted awake when they're driving home or in the middle of the night when they're responding to a fire. There are a few rules or guidelines for
Starting point is 00:40:46 tea and coffee because tea and coffee will affect your sleep. And we know that almost all of us take at least six to eight hours to break down the caffeine, the active ingredient that keeps us awake by 50%. So that means if you had one cup of coffee at noon, you still have half a cup of coffee or tea at 6 p.m. in your system and quarter cup of coffee or tea at midnight in your system. So that means to improve your sleep, it's better to stop coffee or tea by around 2 o'clock in the afternoon. So I said no coffee or tea by around two o'clock in the afternoon. So I said no coffee or
Starting point is 00:41:26 tea after 2 p.m. if you are you're planning to go to sleep between say 10 p.m. and midnight. Because another thing is you need good night's sleep because when you sleep when you can't sleep enough or when you're not sleeping enough then your brain actually craves for unhealthy food. And what about in the in the morning session i think a lot of people and and and i'm included here have found like one of the ways that you can push out your breakfast time is that you have like i tend to i like tea i tend to have a black tea other people might have black coffee in the morning when you wake up and then eat quite a bit later is that breaking any of these magical things you're describing or do you feel
Starting point is 00:42:07 quite good or are you going to say the experimental data isn't in yet? Actually, in many of the studies that are published, the participants were allowed to drink black tea or black coffee. Having said that, if you're drinking like one liter of coffee before your breakfast at noon, then be mindful about that because having too much of hot coffee or tea in empty stomach for some people, not for all, for some people, it can increase the risk for acid reflux or heartburn. So if you begin to see that you are having acid reflux or heartburn, and you have this habit of having more ink of your tea to delay your breakfast time, then maybe that's not the best practice. I would like to
Starting point is 00:42:51 try and do a quick summary of the conversation, if that's all right. And please just correct me if I get any part of this wrong. We started by your explaining that every cell in my body has this 24-hour circadian rhythm. And so that's sort of amazing in every part of me. And that then leads to all the different organs in my body sort of making these different decisions based upon the time of day. So you described that at night, you know, my blood pressure goes lower, my heart rate might go a bit lower, but then before I wake up, it all starts to reverse so that I'm ready to go. So like my whole body is changing and getting prepared for what's coming next. You gave this great example of how there's this experiment once a year where daylight saving happens and everybody wakes up an hour early and there's this big spike in the number of people having heart attacks, the number of people having road accidents, which just goes to show like how
Starting point is 00:43:48 important this circadian rhythm is if we don't live within even just by one hour, you have a real impact. And I think you then explain that these clocks do a lot of different things. But I took away that there's maybe two really critical things. One is sort of preparing us for what's going to happen next. So this is making sure that in that example, you don't have a heart attack because your heart has already got things going. And so you can see that if you're living out of rhythm, like, you know, on Saturday morning, I'm having this completely different pattern than on Friday, that you're in all sorts of trouble. But the other part that you talked about is there's a lot of processes in our body
Starting point is 00:44:24 that need to happen when another process stops. And you talked about the cleaning crew, which is a wonderful metaphor. So your gut can't heal itself if there's food going through it. So it needs to know that at nighttime, you're going to stop eating, it's going to fix it. But you also gave this great example of your skin, which actually grows at nighttime so that the sun doesn't come on it when it's fresh. So all of these things that are designed to be in a cycle driven by a world where you were saying as human beings, we might stay up for a few hours after dark to talk around the fire, but then we go to bed. So our whole body is built for this system. And then in the last 50 years, we suddenly introduced this cheap electric light and everything has changed and suddenly you can sleep through you can also have your alarm go off much earlier than you want to wake up and so all of these things have have changed that's not good so how
Starting point is 00:45:14 do you get these things aligned and you said there's two main ways to sort of fix your circadian rhythm one is with light exposure we said that's actually quite hard to manage in in our life because the electric lights, I'm sitting here right now, it's already gone dark outside. The lights are on. She said, interestingly, the way that you eat can reset your clock. And this is, I think, one of this is fascinating new science. So if you're eating at the wrong times, your body clock gets really confused.
Starting point is 00:45:40 So if I eat this really late snack, my body's like, well, hang on a minute. Is that breakfast or the morning? But if I can eat at the right time and give myself these long breaks I could actually start to live with my circadian rhythm you described this this famous study that you carried out which I know is incredibly well regarded where you said look I'm taking these identical mice I'm letting some of them eat whenever they want. I'm letting the others eat only for eight hours. And even though you gave them this terrible diet, it's a bit like, you know, the standard American diet. Actually, the mice that were just eating eight hours a day were able to cope with it. Whereas the ones that were eating all the time, they had all of these health problems.
Starting point is 00:46:20 And then more recently, you've described these new studies starting to look at what this means with humans, and it's relatively early. But I think what you're saying, which is really interesting, is very few people are actually eating even within 12 hours. So most of us in the West are eating more than 12 hours. And you're saying almost everybody should be able to eat within 12 hours. I think you said from 10 years old to like 99, you should be able to. So if you start eating at 9am, you should finish at 9pm. And that's quite strict. You can't have a glass of milk or a glass of wine, or even a chocolate biscuit, you've got to not eat. And that's to create all of this time for cleaning. And then I think you said, look, if you can manage that, actually, there can be even more benefits if you can further restrict the time. And in your studies, generally, you're restricting people's eating to between eight hours and 10 hours. And if that means there's a significant reduction from what people were doing before, you've seen real benefits, particularly quite rapidly, things like better sleep and better energy, which is very similar to some of the results from our own studies. And then over longer time periods, sort of three to six months, you're seeing impacts on
Starting point is 00:47:29 some of these sort of clinically important measures like blood pressure. And they're like, you didn't want to overstate how big they are. So statistically significant, not transforming. And then I think the key message that I think you get left was you can't just eat rubbish food and do this and expect that this will fix everything. Actually, the good news, though, is that by doing this, you might actually find it easier to adapt to a healthier diet because you potentially have more control, eat more over things like breakfast that you have control. And that you permit tea and coffee outside of the period. But I would say you weren't massively keen on it, Sachin, if I play that back. You were certainly concerned about caffeine, but I would say in general, I would say you're sort of suggesting that I ought to be able to manage
Starting point is 00:48:14 sort of even tea and coffee mainly within this period. I have to say that if you have this acid reflux, heartburn, that kind of issue, then pay attention to whether having that black coffee in the morning is triggering it or increasing the severity. If so, then that may not be the best thing for your gut. That's great advice. Interesting that we see that also as one of the things that seems to be quite linked to poor diet, unhealthy microbiome. So I feel like in a sense that there's a positive story as well. I know one of our scientists, Will Bolswicz,
Starting point is 00:48:50 talks about this quite a bit, that by shifting your gut health, that's actually one of the symptoms that often you can see that potentially reduces. So it's interesting how these things are interrelated. Sachin, thank you so much for coming. I thought that was fascinating. We did not manage to discuss sleep. So I hope that I can tempt you back in the future and we could do a podcast,
Starting point is 00:49:11 you know, specifically focused on sleep. And I think, of course, update probably on the science on time-restricted eating, which I feel is moving sort of very rapidly at the moment. Yeah. Thank you so much. And have a perfect circadian day. I will do my best. Thank you very much. I think it's been pretty incredible to learn from a world-leading expert today about how
Starting point is 00:49:31 food impacts our circadian rhythms. I hope Sachin's insights left you with plenty of practical tips to apply to your life. And it's clear that good nutrition includes eating at the right time. But of course, what you eat is even more important in terms of its impact on your health. A Zoe membership helps you make the smartest food choices to transform your health. Using science that's backed by real clinical studies, a Zoe membership could help you feel better now
Starting point is 00:49:58 and enjoy many more healthy years in the future. You can learn more about a Zoe membership and get 10% off by going to zoe.com slash podcast. I'm your host, Jonathan Wolfe. Zoe Science and Nutrition is produced by Yellow Hewins Martin, Richard Willen, and Sam Durham. As always, the Zoe Science and Nutrition podcast is not medical advice. If you have any medical concerns, please consult your doctor. See you next time.

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