Guest guest Posted January 19, 2001 Report Share Posted January 19, 2001 I'm forwarding this because I found the information about the liver and diet playing a role in circadian rhythms very interesting. I want to think about this in connection with the functions traditionally assigned to the Liver in TCM. Victoria >Resetting mealtime may overcome jet lag > > > Tucson, Arizona Friday, 19 January 2001 > > > Resetting mealtime may overcome jet lag > Study of rats finds liver's biological clock reset >by eating habits, a major discovery > THE ASSOCIATED PRESS > > WASHINGTON - The timing of meals may play an >important role in resetting body clocks, concludes a study that could aid >scientists hunting ways to combat long-distance travelers' jet lag. > > The discovery, published in today's edition of the >journal Science, is in rats, not travelers, scientists cautioned. > > Still, " it's noninvasive to change your eating >habits, " notes lead researcher Michael Menaker, a University of Virginia >biologist. " This would give you a reason to try it. " > > But more important than the nuisance of jet lag, >Menaker stressed, the discovery that the liver resets its own biological >rhythms according to eating habits also could point the way to better >therapy for serious liver diseases. > > Everyone has a sort of master clock in the brain >that controls " circadian rhythms, " biological patterns such as sleep and >body temperature. This brain clock is very light-sensitive, the reason most >people sleep at night and wake during the day. Travel to a greatly >different time zone, however, and it can take a while for that master brain >clock to adjust. > > Then scientists discovered the brain-based clock >isn't the only control of circadian rhythms. Other organs seem to have >their own clocks that supplement the brain's master clock. Perhaps that's >why sleep problems aren't the only jet lag symptom; lots of sufferers >complain of stomach upset and other problems, too. > > Menaker simulated jet lag by exposing rats to >light six hours earlier than they'd normally wake. While the >light-sensitive brain clock could adjust in a few days, the rats' separate >liver circadian rhythms were out of sync for up to two weeks. > > The liver helps control food metabolism. So >Menaker, working with scientists in Norway and Japan, wondered if changing >mealtimes would reset the liver's own circadian rhythm and thus help >readjust the overall body clock. > > They tested rats genetically engineered to carry a >fluorescent-stained clock-related gene - when and how much the rats' liver >tissue glowed under a microscope showed allowed measurement of the liver's >circadian rhythms. > > Rats normally sleep during the day and feed at >night. Allow them food only for four hours during daylight and they rapidly >act like day is night, pumping away on their exercise wheels for a few >hours before the food appears. > > Are they just hungry? Checking those liver genes >under the microscope, Menaker found that the circadian clock in the liver >had shifted by 10 hours after just two days of adjusted mealtimes. > > > > > > > > >Front Page | Tucson | Opinion | Business | Sports | Accent | Entertainment >WEATHER | AZ/WEST | NATIONAL | WASHINGTON | WORLD | E THE PEOPLE | AP WIRE >| NEWSLINKS > >© Arizona Daily Star _______________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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