After spending 20 years treating heart disease, clogged arteries, and metabolic dysfunction, I began to notice a less-discussed factor that promotes cardiovascular health: what happens in the hours after a shift.
Heart disease develops over many years due to repetitive signals such as blood pressure patterns, inflammation, blood sugar regulation, and sleep quality. Many of these are formed by our daily activities at night. Your nighttime choices determine whether your body moves into a repair state or stays in stress mode.
As a cardiologist, here are seven things I consistently avoid after 7 p.m.
1. Eating late at night
2. Bright overhead lighting and harsh LEDs
Exposure to bright, bluish light after sunset suppresses melatonin release. Melatonin plays a role in sleep regulation, blood pressure control, and antioxidant activity within the cardiovascular system.
Studies have linked nighttime light exposure to increased risk of coronary heart disease and disruption of normal nighttime blood pressure patterns.
Choose warm light bulbs and eye-level lamps to mimic sunset lighting conditions. I also use a red light bulb in the bathroom to brush my teeth and get ready for bed.
3. TV that stimulates stress and emotions
Your nervous system doesn’t know it’s just a show. Psychological stress, whether it’s a political debate, the turmoil of a reality show, or a high-stakes playoff game, activates the sympathetic nervous system and increases heart rate and blood pressure.
Decades of research have shown that both acute and chronic stress contribute to endothelial dysfunction, an early stage of cardiovascular disease. In people who are potentially at risk, intense emotional stress can even trigger an actual cardiac event.
Personally? I love a good series more than anyone else. I just don’t watch it at night. Save other people’s crazy dramas for the weekend when your nervous system has some free time. Activating your stress hormones right before bed is like keeping your foot on the gas pedal when you pull into the garage.
4. Vigorous exercise
Exercise is one of the best things you can do for your heart, but timing is key.
If you train hard late at night, your cortisol will remain elevated, delaying your transition from fight-or-flight mode to rest-and-repair mode. This can delay the onset of sleep, increase nighttime heart rate, and reduce heart rate variability (an important marker of cardiovascular resilience).
Yes, some movement is better than no movement. But high-intensity training at, say, 9 p.m. often compromises recovery, and that’s where the real cardiovascular benefits actually come from. Your heart needs a runway to slow down, not one last spurt before midnight.
5. Alcohol intake
Alcohol has a relaxing effect. Physiologically, the opposite is true. Even moderate evening drinking can disrupt sleep architecture, suppress REM sleep, and interfere with melatonin production.
It also increases resting heart rate and slows the normal nocturnal drop in blood pressure, which is strongly associated with increased cardiovascular risk. Sleep deprivation amplifies inflammation, worsens metabolic regulation, and worsens long-term cardiac risks.
6. Emotional conversations
Anger and emotional stress have very real cardiovascular effects. Acute stress can spike cortisol, reduce heart rate variability, and cause arrhythmias and cardiac events in vulnerable people.
A night argument with your wife doesn’t just spoil the atmosphere. Stress hormones flood your body with stress hormones just when your body should be powering down. There are also important conversations. Not all of those things need to happen tonight.
7. Screen exposure without filter
Cell phones, tablets, and televisions emit blue light, which slows the release of melatonin and changes your circadian timing. This delays the time you fall asleep and reduces the quality of your sleep.
Chronic sleep disturbances are independently associated with hypertension, insulin resistance, inflammation, and increased cardiovascular risk. Protecting sleep consistency supports long-term heart function.
Of course, we always recommend consulting your doctor before making any major changes to your daily routine. For me, my rules after 7pm are simple. The goal is to reduce circadian rhythm disturbances and sympathetic stress, and restore the heart.
Dr. Sanjay Bhojraj is a board-certified interventional cardiologist and a board-certified functional medicine physician. A pioneer at the intersection of precision cardiology and lifestyle medicine, he is the founder of Well12, a wellness program that helps individuals recover from chronic disease through nutrition, breathing exercises, and genomic insights. Dr. Bhojraj is also the National Educator for the Institute of Functional Medicine. Follow him on Instagram.
Want to lead with confidence and bring out the best in your team? Take CNBC’s new online course, How to Become an Exceptional Leader. Expert instructors share practical strategies to help you build trust, communicate clearly, and motivate others to do their best work. Sign up now and use coupon code EARLYBIRD to receive an initial discount of 25% off the regular course price of $127 (plus tax). Offer valid from March 16th to March 30th, 2026. Terms and conditions apply.
