Your body clock is a tiny cluster of nerve cells in the center of
your brain, about the size and shape of a letter "V" on this page. Located just
above a major junction for nerves coming from the eyes, the clock relies on sunlight to
keep you synchronized with planetary time. Like the thermostat
connected to your home furnace, your body clock makes your body temperature and blood
pressure rise before you usually awaken in the morning. It triggers the release of
"get up and go" hormones you need to start the day. Your body clock makes you
predictably alert in the daytime, sleepy at night, and hungry when you habitually eat. It
controls cell division, bone growth, and other basic body maintenance. People who can't
utilize sunlight cues--those who are totally blind--commonly experience sleep problems and
other rhythm disruptions.
While daily rhythms are most prominent in our lives, shorter and
longer ones affect us, too. Many illnesses in women, for example, worsen just before
monthly menstruation. In the United States and other countries of similar latitude, more
babies are born in late summer than at any other time of year. The birth rates reflect
seasonal variations in sexual activity, most likely spurred by heightened secretion of the
male sex hormone testosterone in late autumn when days grow shorter.
The tick and tock of your body clock holds numerous implications for
your health. When you are well, body rhythms work in synchrony, like a finely-tuned
orchestra. Illness, travel across multiple time zones, and shift work schedules often
throw body rhythms out of tune.
Doctors are starting to acknowledge body time when they decide
what's wrong, order tests, and prescribe medication and other treatment. The
Body Clock Guide to Better Health: How to Use Your Body's Natural Clock to Fight Illness
and Achieve Maximum Health tells you how to put new findings in
chronomedicine to work in your own life. This book aims to help you cope better with
short-lasting illnesses such as colds and flu, episodic ones such as headaches and back
pain, and persistent ailments such as arthritis, high blood pressure, heart disease,
cancer, and more.
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