March 25, 2026
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Fitness

Heart health tips: Cardiologist lists 7 things you should never do after 8 pm

When your heart wants to slow down, but you don’t

Evenings feel harmless. Work slows, screens glow, snacks appear, and the body finally gets “me time.” But this is also when the heart quietly begins its recovery work. Blood pressure dips, heart rate steadies, and the body shifts into repair mode.

Dr VP Sharma, Director and Senior Consultant Cardiology, Fortis Hospital Jalandhar, puts it clearly, “The body gradually shifts into a circadian recovery phase after 7 pm, when blood pressure, heart rate and metabolic activity begin slowing down. Disrupting this rhythm can place unnecessary strain on the cardiovascular system.”

The problem is not what happens during the day. It is what continues after it should stop. These seven evening habits may look small, but over time, they can quietly push the heart into stress.

Heavy dinners that your heart works overtime to process

Dinner is often the heaviest meal of the day. That is where the trouble begins.

That “harmless” evening coffee that isn’t so harmless

An evening cup of coffee or tea feels comforting. But caffeine lingers longer than expected.

It stimulates the nervous system, raises heart rate, and delays sleep. Poor sleep then feeds into higher blood pressure the next day.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) notes that caffeine can stay in the body for up to 6 hours or more.

So that 7 pm coffee may still be active at midnight. The heart never truly switches off.

The “nightcap” myth that quietly disturbs your rhythm

Alcohol is often seen as a sleep aid. It makes people feel drowsy. But what follows is broken sleep.

Dr Sharma warns, “Though it causes drowsiness, it disrupts the sleep cycle and can cause arrhythmias in the heart.”

Irregular heart rhythms, especially at night, can go unnoticed for years. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) highlights alcohol as a risk factor for high blood pressure and heart disease.

The body may fall asleep, but the heart stays unsettled.

Screens at night that confuse your internal clock

Scrolling before bed has become routine. But screens emit blue light that tells the brain it is still daytime.

This delays melatonin release, the hormone that signals sleep. The result is a shorter, poorer quality sleep cycle.

Dr Sharma notes, “Nighttime light exposure may increase the risk of cardiovascular conditions by as much as 30–50%.”

The heart depends on rhythm. Screens quietly break it.

Late-night stress, workouts, and nicotine spikes

Evenings are often used to “catch up.” Late work calls, intense workouts, or even a cigarette to unwind.

All of these do the same thing: raise cortisol and stimulate the heart.

Dr Sharma advises avoiding intense activity late in the evening. Nicotine, in particular, constricts blood vessels and raises blood pressure.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), tobacco use is one of the leading causes of cardiovascular disease globally.

The body cannot relax if it is still being pushed.

Sleep procrastination that costs more than just rest

Scrolling one more video. Watching one more episode. Delaying sleep feels small, but it adds up.

Dr Sharma highlights, “Persistent ‘night-owl’ sleep patterns are associated with up to a 16% higher risk of heart attack or stroke.”

The American Heart Association (AHA) also links poor sleep duration and irregular sleep timing with cardiovascular risk.

Sleep is not passive. It is when the heart repairs itself. Cutting it short means cutting recovery.

Salty snacks that quietly raise your blood pressure

Late-night cravings often lead to chips, namkeen, or processed foods. These are high in sodium.

Dr Sharma explains, “Late-night chips or processed snacks cause the body to retain water. This increases the volume of blood your heart has to pump.”

That extra fluid load pushes blood pressure up at a time when it should be dropping.

It is not just about calories. It is about pressure inside the arteries.

A simple truth about evenings and the heart

Evening habits are often ignored because they feel deserved. But the heart does not see them as rewards. It sees them as signals.

A lighter dinner, fewer screens, less stimulation, and better sleep timing can do what medicines often try to fix later

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