Shanga Hassan Qadir, Helle Klingenberg Iversen, Niklas Rye Jørgensen, Poul Jørgen Jennum, Henriette Pia Sennels, Anders Sode West
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Hospitalized stroke patients are at high risk of developing circadian disruption due to lack of natural sunlight. This may affect the circadian rhythm of the calcium metabolism. This study is a secondary explorative analysis from a Randomized Controlled Trial. Acute stroke patients requiring a minimum of two weeks of rehabilitation were randomized to an Intervention unit (IU) equipped with naturalistic light or a Control unit (CU) with standard indoor lighting. Blood was drawn across 24 h at inclusion and discharge in 45 patients, 25 from the IU and 20 from the CU. Calcium showed significant rhythmicity at inclusion and discharge in both groups. Alkaline phosphatase, parathyroid hormone (PTH), and Vitamin D exhibited no significant rhythmicity at inclusion or discharge in either group while phosphate exhibited rhythmicity at discharge in the CU. PTH levels were elevated in the CU group compared to the IU group at time of discharge. Of the measured parameters, only calcium exhibited circadian rhythmicity after stroke. Naturalistic light did not have any influence on the rhythmicity, indicating that light may not be the main circadian regulator of the circadian oscillations that regulate calcium metabolism. PTH seems to be decreased by naturalistic light.
期刊介绍:
The Scandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation is an international scientific journal covering clinically oriented biochemical and physiological research. Since the launch of the journal in 1949, it has been a forum for international laboratory medicine, closely related to, and edited by, The Scandinavian Society for Clinical Chemistry.
The journal contains peer-reviewed articles, editorials, invited reviews, and short technical notes, as well as several supplements each year. Supplements consist of monographs, and symposium and congress reports covering subjects within clinical chemistry and clinical physiology.