
When clocks âspring forwardâ by one hour in March, many people notice more than just grogginess. In the first days after the time change, research has observed a short-term uptick in cardiovascular eventsâespecially acute myocardial infarction (heart attack)âlikely related to sleep loss + circadian rhythm disruption + stress-system activation. (PubMed)
This matters most for anyone with:
Below is an authority-level, patient-education guide you can use to protect your heart and nervous systemâplus a clinic-support section that includes Standard Process (SP) products such as B-Core, Neuroplex, Hawthorn, Omega-3, E-Z Mag, and SP Red Food.
A well-known analysis found that the Monday after the spring DST transition was associated with a ~24% increase in daily acute myocardial infarction counts (compared with other Mondays), even after adjusting for seasonal patterns. (PubMed)
Professional summaries have reported similar findings (often described as ~24â25%). (American Heart Association)
Not all studies show the same magnitude, and newer work suggests the one-hour shift may be less important than long-term sleep habits and sleep regularity. Thatâs why the best approach is not fearâitâs smart preparation that improves sleep consistency and reduces physiologic stress. (JAMA Network)
The American Heart Association has also highlighted evidence of a short-term rise in ischemic stroke rates after DST transitions in some datasets. (American Heart Association)
Bottom line: Even if the risk increase is temporary, itâs meaningful at a population levelâand itâs most relevant for people already under stress, inflamed, sleep-deprived, or metabolically strained.
Think of your body as running on an internal clock (circadian rhythm). When sleep is shortened and light exposure timing shifts suddenly, several things can happen:
This is why some people feel:
If symptoms are severe or newâespecially chest pain, pressure, radiating pain, fainting, or severe shortness of breathâseek urgent medical care.
Best practice: move bedtime earlier by 15â30 minutes per night for 3â4 nights before DST. This reduces the âshockâ of sudden sleep loss and helps the nervous system adapt. (This strategy aligns with expert recommendations frequently cited in major health guidance.) (AP News)
If your schedule allows for it, wake up a bit later on Sunday and Monday (or protect bedtime strongly). The goal is to reduce the total sleep debt in the first 48 hours.
Get 10â20 minutes of outdoor light within 30â60 minutes of waking for 2â4 days after the time change. Morning light helps anchor circadian rhythm and improves daytime alertness and nighttime sleep.
Evening light suppresses melatonin and shifts the biological ânight signal.â Room light exposure before bedtime can meaningfully suppress melatonin and disrupt circadian timing. (PMC)
Blue-rich light is especially potent in shifting circadian rhythms and suppressing melatonin. (Harvard Health)
Patient tips:
Note: There is ongoing debate about how much smartphone blue light alone drives insomnia compared with âcontent + arousal.â Still, reducing bright light exposure and lowering stimulation at night is a reliable, low-risk sleep strategy. (WIRED)
A brisk walk earlier in the day helps blood pressure, glucose regulation, and stress tone. Hydration supports circulationâespecially if you tend to run âdry,â be anxious, or be headache-prone during sleep changes.
We carry in clinic the SP Red Food (Standard Process). This product contains a proprietary blend including organic beet (root) and other ingredients; the label emphasizes phytonutrient support for cardiometabolic wellness.
Beetroot provides dietary nitrates that can increase nitric oxide availability, supporting blood vessel relaxation and blood pressure regulation. A systematic review/meta-analysis has found nitrate derived from beetroot juice can reduce systolic blood pressure in people with hypertension. (PubMed)
Clinical trial evidence also supports dietary nitrate strategies for blood pressure and vascular function. (AHA Journals)
If patients donât do supplements, they can still follow the âred foodâ concept:
Research on berry anthocyanins and endothelial/cardiometabolic markers is supportive overall, with ongoing study on who benefits most and at what dose. (PMC)
These options are based on your own health history, current medications, pregnancy status, kidney function, and bleeding risk.
B vitamins are involved in:
Folic acid and B12 can lower homocysteine substantially (a biomarker associated with vascular risk), though large trials have shown that lowering homocysteine does not always translate into fewer cardiovascular events in all populationsâso we treat B vitamins as foundational support, not a âheart-attack prevention pill.â (PubMed)
Patient-friendly positioning:
During DST week, B-vitamin support may help the body handle stress load, sleep disruption, and nervous system strainâespecially if diet quality has been inconsistent.
Hawthorn extract has a history of use in cardiovascular support. Meta-analyses of randomized trials in chronic heart failure have reported improvements in functional measures when used as an adjunct (not a replacement for medical care). (PubMed)
Cautions:
Hawthorn can interact with cardiovascular medications (e.g., blood pressure meds, digoxin-like effects have been discussed in herbal references). Patients on prescription cardiac meds should consult their prescribing clinician.
Omega-3s have evidence supporting triglyceride reduction and, in certain contexts, cardiovascular benefitâthough results vary by formulation, dose, and population. NIHâs ODS summary includes meta-analytic conclusions suggesting reductions in some cardiovascular outcomes, with dose-related effects noted in some analyses. (Office of Dietary Supplements)
The American Heart Association has also discussed omega-3s, emphasizing food-first when possible and noting that supplements may be appropriate for specific patients (rather than universal prevention). (www.heart.org)
NIH ODS notes magnesium supplementation may reduce blood pressure modestly and highlights qualified health claim language around hypertension risk. (Office of Dietary Supplements)
Magnesium status can be tricky because serum levels may not reflect total-body magnesium, which is one reason clinicians assess magnesium thoughtfully in relevant scenarios. (PMC)
SP Red Food includes ingredients such as organic beet (root) and others per label.
From a functional perspective, this fits a DST protocol because the time change can stress:
We pair this with lifestyle steps (sleep + light) because thatâs where the strongest circadian leverage exists.
Call emergency services immediately for:
References:
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