학술논문

Night shift schedule alters endogenous regulation of circulating cytokines
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Sleep Research
Infectious Diseases
Inflammatory and immune system
Good Health and Well Being
COVID-19
Cytokine storm
Infectious disease
Inflammation
Night work
Temporal regulation
Neurosciences
Biological psychology
Language
Abstract
Night shift work is a risk factor for viral infection, suggesting that night shift schedules compromise host defense mechanisms. Prior studies have investigated changes in the temporal profiles of circulating cytokines important for priming and restraining the immune response to infectious challenges from night shift work, but not by way of a 24-h constant routine of continuous wakefulness devoid of behavioral or environmental influences. Hence the true endogenous pattern of cytokines, and the combined effect of sleep loss and circadian misalignment on these cytokines remains unknown. Here, 14 healthy young men and women underwent three days of either a simulated night shift or a simulated day shift schedule under dim light in a controlled in-laboratory environment. This was followed by a 24-h constant routine protocol during which venous blood was collected at 3-h intervals. Those who had been in the night shift schedule showed lower mean circulating TNF-α (t13 = -6.03, p