Why can jet lag upset your stomach even after a decent sleep on the plane?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Digestive rhythms misalign
Spoiled airline food — Bad food can cause stomach trouble, but jet lag does not require food poisoning. Mayo lists stomach and bowel problems among jet-lag effects, and Frontiers ties poor gastrointestinal function to circadian mismatch after time-zone travel. The useful distinction is illness versus timing: the body can be healthy but scheduled wrong.
Digestive rhythms misalign ✓ — Jet lag is a body-wide timing problem, not just a sleep problem. Digestion, hunger, and bowel timing can remain out of step with local meals even after you got some sleep. This helps explain why stomach symptoms can survive a decent in-flight nap: sleep pressure improved, but internal schedules still disagree.
Cabin pressure alone — Cabin pressure can contribute to travel discomfort, but it is too narrow to explain destination-time digestive rhythm problems. The more interesting mechanism is internal desynchrony: organ clocks and meal timing can be out of phase with local time. Jet lag feels diffuse because the body is not one clock.
More Biology questions
- After arrival, why is a 20-minute nap usually safer than a long daytime sleep?
- Why can late-afternoon coffee at your destination sabotage first-night jet lag?
- For a 36-hour overseas trip, why might staying on home sleep hours beat forcing local time?
- Why does melatonin timing matter more than just taking a bigger dose for jet lag?
- Why does eastward jet lag feel harder to adjust to than westward jet lag?
- If your internal day runs about 24.2 hours, which travel shift gets a tiny natural assist?
