Circadian-informed lighting improves vigilance, sleep, and subjective sleepiness during simulated night shift work.

IF 5.6 2区 医学 Q1 Medicine Sleep Pub Date : 2024-07-30 DOI:10.1093/sleep/zsae173
Hannah Scott, Alisha Guyett, Jack Manners, Nicole Stuart, Eva Kemps, Barbara Toson, Nicole Lovato, Andrew Vakulin, Leon Lack, Siobhan Banks, Jillian Dorrian, Robert Adams, Danny J Eckert, Peter Catcheside
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Abstract

Study objectives: Shiftwork is associated with cognitive impairment and reduced sleep time and quality, largely due to circadian misalignment. This study tested if circadian-informed lighting could improve cognitive performance and sleep during simulated night shifts versus dim control lighting.

Methods: Nineteen healthy participants (Mean±SD 29±10 years, 12 males, 7 females) were recruited to a laboratory study consisting of two counterbalanced 8-day lighting conditions (order randomized) 1-month apart: 1) control lighting condition- dim, blue-depleted and 2) circadian-informed lighting condition- blue-enriched and blue-depleted where appropriate. Participants underwent an adaptation night (22:00h - 07:00h), then four nights of simulated nightwork (cognitive testing battery of nine tasks, 00:00h - 08:00h) and sleep during the day (10:00h - 19:00h). Psychomotor vigilance task (PVT) lapses, Karolinska Sleepiness Scale (KSS) scores, and polysomnography-derived sleep outcomes were compared between conditions and across days using mixed models.

Results: Significant condition-by-day-by-time of task interaction effects were found for PVT lapses, median reaction time, and reaction speed, with ~50% fewer lapses by the end of simulated shiftwork with circadian-informed lighting versus control (mean±SD 7.4±5.0 vs. 15.6±6.1). KSS was lower around the nightshift midpoints on days 6 and 7 with circadian versus control lighting. Participants slept 52 minutes longer [95% CIs: 27.5, 76.5 mins] by Day 7 with circadian-informed versus control lighting, p<0.001. Effects were inconsistent on other performance tasks.

Conclusions: Circadian-informed lighting improved sleep, sleepiness, and vigilance compared to control lighting. These findings support the potential for lighting interventions to improve sleep and vigilance in night shift workers chronically exposed to dim lighting.

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昼夜节律信息照明可在模拟夜班工作中提高警觉性、改善睡眠和主观嗜睡感。
研究目的轮班工作与认知障碍、睡眠时间和质量减少有关,这主要是由于昼夜节律失调造成的。本研究测试了昼夜节律照明与昏暗的对照照明相比,是否能在模拟夜班期间改善认知能力和睡眠:招募了 19 名健康参与者(平均年龄(±SD)29±10 岁,男性 12 人,女性 7 人)参加一项实验室研究,该研究包括两种平衡的 8 天照明条件(顺序随机),相隔 1 个月:1)控制照明条件--昏暗、缺蓝;2)昼夜节律信息照明条件--富蓝和适当缺蓝。受试者先进行一个晚上的适应性训练(22:00-07:00),然后进行四个晚上的模拟夜间工作(九项任务的认知测试,00:00-08:00)和白天的睡眠(10:00-19:00)。采用混合模型比较了不同条件和不同天数下的精神运动性警觉任务(PVT)失效、卡罗林斯卡嗜睡量表(KSS)评分和多导睡眠监测仪得出的睡眠结果:在昼夜节律失效、中位数反应时间和反应速度方面发现了显著的条件-任务-时间交互效应,在昼夜节律照明模拟轮班工作结束时,失效次数比对照组少 50%(平均值±SD 7.4±5.0 对 15.6±6.1)。昼夜节律照明与对照组相比,第 6 天和第 7 天夜班中点附近的 KSS 更低。到第 7 天,使用昼夜节律照明与对照组相比,参与者的睡眠时间延长了 52 分钟[95% CIs:27.5,76.5 分钟]:与对照组相比,昼夜节律照明改善了睡眠、嗜睡和警觉性。这些研究结果表明,照明干预措施有可能改善长期暴露在昏暗照明下的夜班工人的睡眠和警觉性。
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来源期刊
Sleep
Sleep Medicine-Neurology (clinical)
CiteScore
8.70
自引率
10.70%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: SLEEP® publishes findings from studies conducted at any level of analysis, including: Genes Molecules Cells Physiology Neural systems and circuits Behavior and cognition Self-report SLEEP® publishes articles that use a wide variety of scientific approaches and address a broad range of topics. These may include, but are not limited to: Basic and neuroscience studies of sleep and circadian mechanisms In vitro and animal models of sleep, circadian rhythms, and human disorders Pre-clinical human investigations, including the measurement and manipulation of sleep and circadian rhythms Studies in clinical or population samples. These may address factors influencing sleep and circadian rhythms (e.g., development and aging, and social and environmental influences) and relationships between sleep, circadian rhythms, health, and disease Clinical trials, epidemiology studies, implementation, and dissemination research.
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