Does Turkey Really Make You Sleepy? - podcast episode cover

Does Turkey Really Make You Sleepy?

Nov 22, 20184 min
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Episode description

You may have heard that the tryptophan in turkey causes holiday naps, but it might not be the real culprit. Learn some turkey science in this episode of BrainStuff.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff from How Stuff Works. Hey, brain Stuff, I'm Lauren vogel Bomb, and our question of the day is does turkey really make you sleepy? America's favorite holiday bird does have the makings of a natural sedative in it, and amino acid called tripped de fin. Tripped de fin is an essential amino acid, meaning that you need it, but your body can't manufacture it. The body has to get tripped a fin and other essential amino acids from food.

A trip defin helps the body produce the B vitamin nisin, which in turn helps you produce serotonin. Serotonin is a remarkable chemical that acts as a sort of calming agent in the brain and plays a key role in sleep, and tripped de fin is also a precursor to another common compound, melatonin. So you might think that if you eat a lot of turkey, your body would produce more serotonin and melatonin, and you would feel calm and maybe

more likely to fall asleep. But nutritionists and other experts say that the trip defin in turkey probably won't trigger the body to produce more serotonin because trip defin works best on an empty stomach. The trip defin in Thanksgiving turkey has to vie with all of the other amino acids the body takes in in order to pass the blood brain barrier and get to work. Only part of the trip to fin in a turkey dinner will make

it to the brain to help produce serotonin. The fact that Thanksgiving meals are often carbohydrate heavy actually does help. I think of all the bread stuffings, potatoes, corn, and candied tubers covered in marshmallows that we eat before we even get to the real desserts. The insulin our bodies releases to process all of that also serves as sort of rideshare vehicles for a lot of amino acids, but not for tripped a fin, which hitches a ride to

the brain on a protein called albumin. So with most of the competition out of the way, it is in fact easier for tripped de fin to get into our brain and start the process that leads to the production of more serotonin. Melatonin, meanwhile, is produced outside of the brain, so you don't have to worry about that competition at

the blood brain barrier. You do have to worry that you have all the other compounds necessary for your body to create it Overall, researchers think it's neither the melatonin nor the serotonin produced from trip to Fin that leads to rampant late afternoon napping on Thanksgiving. Most likely, it's the whole traditional meal together producing lethargy. The average Thanksgiving meal contains three thousand calories, more than most of us usually eat in a whole day, and your body works

hard to digest all that food. After all, your nervous system is set up to prime your body for maximum nutrient absorption every single time you eat. A part of this is called our rest and digest response. When we eat, we excrete more saliva and gastric juices, and our heart rate and blood pressure lower. Also, our bodies are sending more blood to our guts in order to help out, meaning that less is available for the brain and the skeletal system. All of this can make you feel lethargic,

limb heavy, and relaxed. Also, if you drink alcohol with your dinner, you'll likely feel the sedative effect of that as well. But there is a way to take advantage of the tripp to fin in Turkey if you have trouble getting to sleep one night while they're still leftover turkey in the fridge, you could have a late turkey snack and that nutritionists say might be the right amount of tripp to fin on an empty stomach to help

produce sin serotonin. Today's episode was mostly written by a How Stuff Works contributor, the name of whom has been lost to time. If it was you right in. It was produced by Tyler Clang with the kind assistance of Paul Decan. For more on this and lots of other fulfilling topics, visit our home planet, how stuff Works dot com.

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