#39 Dr. Satchin Panda on Practical Implementation of Time-Restricted Eating & Shift Work Strategies

Posted on October 30th 2017 (over 7 years)

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This episode is a round 2 episode with none other than Dr. Satchin Panda of the Salk Institute! While discussion with Dr. Panda invariably leads to eating behaviors, his deep background in circadian biology always tends to lend new and insightful perspectives. There's a good reason for this! It's an area he has made deep contributions to, especially through the discovery of melanopsin, which is a photopigment found in the eye that, rather than forming images, is specialized for communicating information about time-of-day to the "master oscillator" of circadian rhythm, the suprachiasmatic nucleus.

On the first episode with Dr. Panda, we were introduced to a new paradigm for eating known as time-restricted eating. Time-restricted eating, on the surface, shares many characteristics with an idea many of you may be more familiar with known as intermittent fasting. The difference, however, is that Dr. Panda's concept of time-restricted feeding has some degree of focus on the effect of poorly timed consumption food (or even xenobiotics) can have on the subtle behavior of our tissues. At nearly two hours of dialog, this episode touches on a lot of material, but also has a special focus on practical implementation of time-restricted eating, featuring a few of the most frequent questions that came after the first conversation. To see a list of these questions, click the timeline tab above and look for timepoints with the heading "practical implementation." (SPOILER: Yes, we cover black coffee!)

"10-14 hours of fasting when we get up in the morning means that we have given our gut rest."- Dr. Satchin Panda" Click To Tweet

In addition to these important and very practical how-to tidbits, we dive into lots of interesting new territory as well, including...

  • How human anecdote and animal evidence suggests time-restricted feeding may be especially useful for gut-related issues, including inflammatory bowel disease and acid reflux.
  • The fascinating way Dr. Panda is using human anecdote from his trial to ask new scientific questions he wouldn't think to ask and then going back to animal data to figure it out and how this unique approach forms a sort of closed loop pattern: animal → human feedback → back to animal for mechanism.
  • How labs doing caloric restriction research may have actually been reaping the benefits of time-restricted without realizing it as an incidental to their experimental design.
  • The revelation that 70% of FDA drugs are subject to circadian effects and are either less effective or more effective at certain times of the day.
  • The effect melatonin has on the pancreatic production of insulin and the insight this lends to why we should probably stop eating at least 2-3 hours before we go to bed.
  • The bizarre way circadian rhythms affects everything from susceptibility to UV damage to recovery from surgery to cancer risk (at least if you think the World Health Organization knows what they're talking about).

...plus a whole lot more...

Participating in the mobile app-based time-restricted eating study

If this podcast inspires you to give time-restricted eating a try, don't let your data go to waste! Dr. Panda's mobile app-based study of time-restricted eating is now accepting an international cohort. For those of you that are at least 18 years of age or older, you can sign-up by visiting myCircadianClock.org.

Participation is pretty simple, but, as mentioned in the video there are a few good rules of thumb:

  • Don't start the habit right away. Track what your existing eating habits are first! This is important for the 2-week baseline needed for their research.
  • After you figure out what your eating window has been, choose a new time window that you think you can reasonably adhere to for at least 12 weeks. This is about how long it takes to form a new habit anyway!
  • If you feel like you've got the hang of it, stick with it! At the very least, try to submit a picture of your first meal and your last meal every day and your bodyweight once per week. By submitting your first and last meal, they're able to use the timestamps associated with these pictures to know how closely you're adhering to your self-selected intervention.

By following these basic rules of thumb, you're helping Satchin's group out and probably getting a little bit healthier in the process! Not a bad deal, right?

Click here to apply to participate in the clinical trial now.

Learn more about Dr. Satchidananda Panda

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Comments

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Litra
08/03/2018

I typically intermittent fast/TRE regularly (only feeding between the hours of 10am-7pm) but just found out that I’m pregnant. As of yet, I haven’t felt much change in appetite (I eat a low carb, whole food diet based on low carb leafy greens and veggies, eggs, fatty fish, nuts, avocados, MCT oil, etc) but wonder if it is contraindicated somehow to continue to time restrict when I feed. Did you continue to follow your time restricted eating habits while your were pregnant? Based on the many podcasts I’ve been listening to, it doesn’t sound like I need to change much about the content of my food, just increase the caloric content in a few months by a few hundred calories. If I can handle it, I don’t see why I’d alter my eating window. Just curious on your thoughts, Dr. Patrick. Thanks, Elizabeth

ALECW92
05/16/2018

I’ve tried TRE many times over the years and I really do enjoy it especially when cutting down or when I have a hectic schedule. Now I really want to try and gain the benefits for longevity from fasting, but I’ve been unsuccessful in finding a real answer about fasting and medication/supplements. I am curious to know if my thyroid medication and pre work supplements count as ending my fast as I like to workout after waking up and don’t eat until a few hours later. Any help is much appreciated! Thank you!!

Daengen
05/08/2018

I started intermittent fasting at the beginning of the year and have found great success with it. I usually start the day and only drink water for the first 4-5 hours of the day and occasionally a cup of black coffee. I typically drink water with electrolytes with a ph of around 8. My question is will it break my fast if I add the juice from a lemon wedge and some sea salt to my water? Any information is greatly appreciated.

jsteen89
04/26/2018

Rhonda, are you aware of Dr. Panda’s view on supplementation during prolonged 4-5 day water fasts? Is it necessary to replenish sodium, magnesium and potassium, or supplement with amino acids to avoid severe lean tissue loss? Thanks, wonderful episode and so glad you dived into this topic for us.

Gramartinm
04/19/2018

Hi Dr.Patrick, I know you’ve been doing TRE for a while, how do you manage hunger? This is so hard! does your body get used to it eventually and hunger subsides?

naturalbornchiller
04/13/2018

Hi Rhonda - in your podcast with Joe Rogan you mentioned that even taking vitamins in the morning can stimulate your appetite and thus doesn’t count as fasting. Does birth control have the same effect?

RickyV92
03/02/2018

Hello Rhonda,

First of all I want to say I’m a big fan of your work and it’s all benefitted me a lot. Now I am an athlete and I have come across a rather tricky scenario. I try to stick to the TRF but I am an athlete and I do a lot of strength training, as well as my actual sport. Now I’m finding myself having difficulty managing my recovery when i have such a short time span to eat. By the time I finish my practice it is dark outside, but if i do not eat after practice my recovery is shot. Is there any information on activity level correlating to keeping the metabolism going after dark?

I know you’re a busy person, and have other things to worry about. But it would shine a light on a dilemma for athletes.

Thanks

I-Dont-Eat-That
02/14/2018

@Rhonda: This is great info, I’m specifically wondering about whether drinking salt water (Pink Himalayan Salt) would break the fast cycle?

I do my 1st workout @4am and while i don’t do pre-workouts I do 24oz. of water + 1tsp of Pink Himalayan Sea Salt. I’ve found that this aids in getting hydrated post sleeping for 6-8hrs.

My understanding is that salt is a mineral and does not get digested.

I have the same question about allergy medications, psyllium husk(with water & cinnamon) and supplements. I take omega-3 fish oils in the morning as well as Allclear (kirland/costco brand claratin)

richnavis
01/16/2018

Rhonda, fascinating info. I’ve started a 14/10 (or is it 10/14?) fast based on this info. However, One thing that is not clear to me is the effect of medications on the fasting period. I take daily Aloopurinol for gout, occasional ibuprofen for pain releif, and occasional Clonazepam as a sleep aid. Will taking any of these medications break the fast? I’ve scoured the internet but have been unable to find any information that is definitive on this.

StraightNoChaserJen
02/04/2018

I have been wondering about the effect of medications too. Also,is it an ‘all or nothing’ type effect- for example, does ingesting tea (for example) start the clock in the same way as a big breakfast?

vickibendus66
12/21/2017

Rhonda, Thank you for the time and effort you put into giving detailed evidence-based information that can be applied by people who aren’t so connected to the current research. I really enjoyed the podcasts with Dr. Panda. I looked a bit more into the study you mention at 1:07:00 concerning surgery outcomes based on time of surgery. I looked for the study you mentioned but the one that was linked I don’t believe was the correct study. The one linked was this one: https://www.nature.com/articles/nrgastro.2010.156 which is about surgery outcomes of humans based on time of day. It seems it is getting more at the performance of the surgeons based on time of day versus the circadian effect that you mentioned in the podcast in the mouse study. I find the concept fascinating and would like to read more on it if you have those studies available. Thanks again for all you do!

2Mil
12/18/2017

I am confused by the idea that consuming anything with calories will start the circadian clock and cut short the intermittent fasting time.

What happens to a person’s circadian rhythm during a multi-day water fast? If his rhythm remains unaltered (because he still gets up at the same time, is active during the day, and retires at the same time at night) then can we also assume that his circadian rhythm is likewise unaltered during a period of fast mimicking? Dr. Longo’s fast mimicking calls for a daily intake of at least 700 kcal. If the body thinks it is fasting, even with this level of nutritional intake, why would the circadian rhythm clock be affected any differently than in a water fast? And even if it does start a circadian rhythm clock, why would it affect the benefits accruing to the body as a result of the fast?

And this brings us to daily intermittent fasting. If a person has an actual eating window of, say, 9 hours but the window does not start until four hours after he arises for the day, how can drinking coffee, even with fat, or tea, or hot water with lemon juice, etc., break the fast when these things are not cognizable by the body during fast mimicking? And why would the intake of these few calories cause the start of a circadian clock effectively nullifying the benefits of the intermittent fast? In other words, if a few calories do not break a long fast, why would they break a short fast?

This is confusing.

Chapmonb
11/03/2017

Thank you so much Rhonda for bringing us this amazing information! You and Dr. Panda were discussing improved endurance performance with the TRE protocol and intermittent fasting. Are there any human studies or animal studies you know of were this is seen?

Keep up the great work! Betsy

rhonda
11/04/2017

Thanks, Betsy! There is indeed some human evidence that fasting, in some contexts, improves endurance and muscle mass.

ShannonC
10/31/2017

As always, phenomenal content. On top of that, stellar website layout! Congrats on this great improvement, keep up the extraordinary work Rhonda.

rhonda
10/31/2017

Thanks! Satchin is doing such important research…always glad to catch up with what his latest research is. Glad you like the website redesign. Lot’s more cool stuff to come! :)

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