作者
Karen L Gamble, Alison A Motsinger-Reif, Akiko Hida, Hugo M Borsetti, Stein V Servick, Christopher M Ciarleglio, Sam Robbins, Jennifer Hicks, Krista Carver, Nalo Hamilton, Nancy Wells, Marshall L Summar, Douglas G McMahon, Carl Hirschie Johnson
发表日期
2011/4/13
期刊
PloS one
卷号
6
期号
4
页码范围
e18395
出版商
Public Library of Science
简介
Background
Daily cycles of sleep/wake, hormones, and physiological processes are often misaligned with behavioral patterns during shift work, leading to an increased risk of developing cardiovascular/metabolic/gastrointestinal disorders, some types of cancer, and mental disorders including depression and anxiety. It is unclear how sleep timing, chronotype, and circadian clock gene variation contribute to adaptation to shift work.
Methods
Newly defined sleep strategies, chronotype, and genotype for polymorphisms in circadian clock genes were assessed in 388 hospital day- and night-shift nurses.
Results
Night-shift nurses who used sleep deprivation as a means to switch to and from diurnal sleep on work days (∼25%) were the most poorly adapted to their work schedule. Chronotype also influenced efficacy of adaptation. In addition, polymorphisms in CLOCK, NPAS2, PER2, and PER3 were significantly associated with outcomes such as alcohol/caffeine consumption and sleepiness, as well as sleep phase, inertia and duration in both single- and multi-locus models. Many of these results were specific to shift type suggesting an interaction between genotype and environment (in this case, shift work).
Conclusions
Sleep strategy, chronotype, and genotype contribute to the adaptation of the circadian system to an environment that switches frequently and/or irregularly between different schedules of the light-dark cycle and social/workplace time. This study of shift work nurses illustrates how an environmental “stress” to the temporal organization of physiology and …
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