Tests, Fixes, and Ideas That Are Shaping My Longevity Strategy

I’ve been taking Benadryl every night for years. Is it bad?

I’ve been taking Benadryl every night for ~3 years now. It’s the only thing that knocks me out. Is it bad?”

This question appeared in my inbox recently, and variations of it come up often. The person mentioned some lingering grogginess in the morning, but otherwise assumed everything was fine.

If some version of that lives in your head, you are not the only one.

Millions of adults use over-the-counter antihistamines as a nightly sleep aid.

The reasoning makes sense: it’s available without a prescription, it’s affordable, and it does produce sleepiness.

On the surface, it looks like a small trade: a familiar allergy ingredient, a predictable sedative effect, and side effects that look like “a little groggy” or “weird dreams.”

This article is about what sits underneath that trade:

The underappreciated risks that go beyond next-day drowsiness.

Why long-term use matters for brain health and dementia risk.

How these drugs disrupt your sleep architecture—even when they help you stay asleep

How to think about your next step in a way that matches the complexity of your midlife physiology, instead of just asking, “What else can I take?”

Let’s get started.

I’ve been taking Benadryl every night for years. Is it bad? Read Post »

Why Does Intermittent Fasting Disrupt Your Sleep?

When a fasting window extends past 12-14 hours, the liver runs low on stored glycogen. To keep the brain fueled overnight, the body turns to gluconeogenesis — manufacturing glucose from amino acids and lactate — a process accompanied by rises in cortisol and growth hormone. These hormones activate the brain’s arousal centers, and can produce

Why Does Intermittent Fasting Disrupt Your Sleep? Read Post »

Does Your Circadian Clock Control When Insulin Works? Prediabetes, the Dawn Phenomenon, and Sleep

Yes. Insulin sensitivity follows a circadian rhythm — highest in the morning, lowest in the evening. The clock genes BMAL1 and CRY1 regulate pancreatic insulin secretion and hepatic glucose output. In early type 2 diabetes, this rhythm is not merely blunted — it reverses, with insulin sensitivity lowest in the morning. The Dawn Phenomenon is

Does Your Circadian Clock Control When Insulin Works? Prediabetes, the Dawn Phenomenon, and Sleep Read Post »

How Do You Increase GABA Levels Naturally for Better Sleep?

Research supports four evidence-based approaches to raising GABA activity naturally. Exercise — particularly high-intensity interval training — increases cortical GABA by approximately 20%. Yoga showed a trend toward elevated thalamic GABA and correlated with mood improvements in ways that matched-calorie walking did not. Certain gut bacteria (Lactobacillus and Bacteroides species) produce GABA directly, and moderate

How Do You Increase GABA Levels Naturally for Better Sleep? Read Post »

Does GABA Affect Testosterone and Sleep in Men?

Testosterone and GABA are biochemically linked. The body converts testosterone into androstanediol, a neurosteroid that positively modulates GABA-A receptors — the same receptors that hold sleep together through the night. As testosterone declines with age, this neurosteroid-mediated GABA support declines with it. A prospective study in a transgender cohort confirmed that testosterone causally reshapes sleep

Does GABA Affect Testosterone and Sleep in Men? Read Post »

Kidney Stone Prevention (beyond hydration & avoiding spinach)

A lot of Longevity Vault members have asked me over the years: “If I just drink more water and avoid spinach, am I safe from kidney stones?”Or: “Kidney stones run in my family—does that mean I’m stuck with them?” Short answer: those things matter. Longer answer: they only touch a small part of the problem. Most kidney stones—70-80%—are calcium oxalate. So if you’re thinking about prevention, oxalate is the main variable. That sets up the more useful question: Is “water + avoiding high-oxalate…

Kidney Stone Prevention (beyond hydration & avoiding spinach) Read Post »

Do GABA Supplements Help You Stay Asleep Through the Night?

The evidence is mixed. A 2020 review of 14 trials concluded the evidence for oral GABA improving sleep is “very limited,” with studies small and industry-funded. Fermented GABA showed stronger results — one trial reduced sleep latency from 13.4 to 5.7 minutes on polysomnography. The central question is whether oral GABA crosses the blood-brain barrier.

Do GABA Supplements Help You Stay Asleep Through the Night? Read Post »

What Are the Signs of Low GABA at Night?

Low functional GABA at night tends to present as a cluster: racing thoughts you cannot suppress, a wired-but-tired feeling where your body is exhausted but your brain will not shut off, waking between 2am and 4am with full alertness, nighttime anxiety that feels different from daytime worry, and difficulty returning to sleep once awake. Brain

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Can Low GABA Cause Waking Up at 3am?

GABA is the neurotransmitter that holds sleep together through the night. When GABAergic inhibition weakens — particularly at the receptor level — the brain’s arousal circuits are no longer suppressed, and you wake up. This typically happens around 2–4am because that is when cortisol begins its natural rise and GABA’s restraining influence is at its

Can Low GABA Cause Waking Up at 3am? Read Post »

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