气候变暖环境热量与睡眠的系统性研究

IF 11.2 1区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Sleep Medicine Reviews Pub Date : 2024-03-06 DOI:10.1016/j.smrv.2024.101915
Guillaume Chevance , Kelton Minor , Constanza Vielma , Emmanuel Campi , Cristina O’Callaghan-Gordo , Xavier Basagaña , Joan Ballester , Paquito Bernard
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引用次数: 0

摘要

气候变化正在使世界各地的夜间和白天气温升高,从而影响到一系列广泛的行为和健康结果。睡眠紊乱是环境温度升高与多种已观察到的人类不良反应之间的一个合理途径,这些不良反应在炎热天气时会增加。本系统综述旨在全面概述在全球范围内调查环境温度与实际环境中测量的有效睡眠结果之间关系的文献。我们发现,在全球范围内,室外或室内温度升高通常与睡眠质量和数量下降有关。热量的负面影响持续存在于各种睡眠测量指标中,在最热的月份和日子、弱势人群和最温暖的地区更为明显。尽管我们发现了加强科学研究的机会,但睡眠快速适应高温的有限证据表明,气候变化和城市化导致的气温升高对人类睡眠,进而对健康、表现和福祉构成了全球性威胁。
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A systematic review of ambient heat and sleep in a warming climate

Climate change is elevating nighttime and daytime temperatures worldwide, affecting a broad continuum of behavioral and health outcomes. Disturbed sleep is a plausible pathway linking rising ambient temperatures with several observed adverse human responses shown to increase during hot weather. This systematic review aims to provide a comprehensive overview of the literature investigating the relationship between ambient temperature and valid sleep outcomes measured in real-world settings, globally. We show that higher outdoor or indoor temperatures are generally associated with degraded sleep quality and quantity worldwide. The negative effect of heat persists across sleep measures, and is stronger during the hottest months and days, in vulnerable populations, and the warmest regions. Although we identify opportunities to strengthen the state of the science, limited evidence of fast sleep adaptation to heat suggests rising temperatures induced by climate change and urbanization pose a planetary threat to human sleep, and therefore health, performance, and wellbeing.

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来源期刊
Sleep Medicine Reviews
Sleep Medicine Reviews 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
20.10
自引率
3.80%
发文量
107
期刊介绍: Sleep Medicine Reviews offers global coverage of sleep disorders, exploring their origins, diagnosis, treatment, and implications for related conditions at both individual and public health levels. Articles comprehensively review clinical information from peer-reviewed journals across various disciplines in sleep medicine, encompassing pulmonology, psychiatry, psychology, physiology, otolaryngology, pediatrics, geriatrics, cardiology, dentistry, nursing, neurology, and general medicine. The journal features narrative reviews, systematic reviews, and editorials addressing areas of controversy, debate, and future research within the field.
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