Heart health isn’t just about what you do during the day—your evening habits matter just as much. Small, consistent choices after 7 p.m. can either support recovery and balance or quietly increase your long-term risk.
You don’t need perfection. But by avoiding these common pitfalls and creating a calmer, more intentional nighttime routine, you give your heart the conditions it needs to rest, repair, and stay strong for years to come.
Cardiologist: 7 things I never do after 7 p.m.—after 20 years of treating heart attacks
By Dr. Sanjay Bhojraj, Contributor
After 20 years of treating heart disease, clogged arteries and metabolic dysfunction, I began to notice a less discussed driver of cardiovascular health: what happens in the hours after the workday ends.
Heart disease develops over years through repeated signals, including blood pressure patterns, inflammation, glucose regulation and sleep quality. Many of these are shaped by routine evening behaviors. Nighttime choices determine whether the body shifts into repair or stays in stress mode.
Here are seven things I consistently avoid after 7 p.m. as a cardiologist.
1. Late-night eating
Metabolic function follows circadian rhythms. In the evening, insulin sensitivity declines and the body becomes less efficient at processing glucose and fats. Late meals are associated with higher post-meal blood sugar levels, impaired lipid metabolism and increased inflammatory signaling.
Research on time-restricted eating shows that earlier meal timing supports healthier blood pressure, glucose control and cardiovascular risk markers. Nighttime digestion also competes with the body’s overnight repair processes, which are critical for vascular health.
2. Bright overhead lighting and harsh LEDs
Exposure to bright, blue-heavy 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 with increased risk of coronary heart disease and disruption of normal nighttime blood pressure patterns.
Opt for warm bulbs and eye level lamps to mimic the lighting conditions of sunset. I even use red lightbulbs in my bathroom to brush my teeth and get ready for bed.
2. Bright overhead lighting and harsh LEDs
Exposure to bright, blue-heavy 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 with increased risk of coronary heart disease and disruption of normal nighttime blood pressure patterns.
Opt for warm bulbs and eye level lamps to mimic the lighting conditions of sunset. I even use red lightbulbs in my bathroom to brush my teeth and get ready for bed.
3. Stressful or emotionally charged television
Your nervous system doesn’t know it’s just a show. Whether it’s a political debate, a reality TV meltdown or a high-stakes playoff game, psychological stress activates the sympathetic nervous system, increasing heart rate and blood pressure.
Decades of research show that both acute and chronic stress contribute to endothelial dysfunction — the earliest stage of cardiovascular disease. In people with underlying risk, intense emotional stress can even trigger real cardiac events.
Personally? I love a good series as much as anyone. I just don’t watch it at night. I’ll save other people’s crazy drama for the weekend, when my nervous system can afford the hit. Revving your stress hormones right before sleep is like flooring the gas pedal as you pull into the garage.
4. Intense exercise
Exercise is one of the best things you can do for your heart, but timing matters.
Hard workouts late at night keep cortisol elevated and delay the shift from fight-or-flight into rest-and-repair mode. That can delay sleep onset, raise overnight heart rate and reduce heart-rate variability (an important marker of cardiovascular resilience.)
Yes, some movement is always better than no movement. But high-intensity training at 9 p.m., for example, often compromises recovery, which is where the real cardiovascular benefits actually happen. Your heart needs a runway to slow down, not one last sprint before midnight.
5. Alcohol consumption
Alcohol feels relaxing. Physiologically, it’s doing the opposite. Even moderate evening drinking disrupts sleep architecture, suppresses REM sleep and interferes with melatonin production.
6. Emotionally charged conversations
Anger and emotional stress have very real cardiovascular consequences. Acute stress spikes cortisol, lowers heart-rate variability, and can trigger arrhythmias or cardiac events in vulnerable individuals.
Evening arguments with the wife don’t just ruin the mood; they flood your system with stress hormones at the exact time your body should be powering down. Some conversations matter. They just don’t all need to happen tonight.
7. Unfiltered screen exposure
Phones, tablets, and televisions emit blue light that delays melatonin release and shifts circadian timing. This leads to later sleep onset and reduced sleep quality.
Chronic sleep disruption is independently associated with hypertension, insulin resistance, inflammation, and elevated cardiovascular risk. Protecting sleep consistency supports long-term cardiac function.
Of course, I always recommend consulting with your physician before making any drastic changes to your routine. For me, after 7 p.m., my rule is simple: Reduce circadian disruption and sympathetic stress, and let your heart recover.
Dr. Sanjay Bhojraj, MD, is a board-certified interventional cardiologist and certified functional medicine doctor. A pioneer at the intersection of precision cardiology and lifestyle medicine, he is the founder of Well12, a wellness program helping individuals reverse chronic disease through nutrition, breathwork, and genomic insights. Dr. Bhojraj is also a national educator for the Institute for Functional Medicine. Follow him on Instagram.
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