Timing of sleep and its relationship with the endogenous melatonin rhythm

While much research has investigated the effects of exogenous melatonin on sleep, less is known about the relationship between the timing of the endogenous melatonin rhythm and the sleep-wake cycle. Significant inter-individual variability in the phase relationship between sleep and melatonin rhythm...

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Main Authors: Tracey L Sletten, Simon Vincenzi, Jennifer R Redman, Steven W Lockley, Shantha M Rajaratnam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2010-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Neurology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fneur.2010.00137/full
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spelling doaj-90fec880570a4aaf924932ddfcd9554a2020-11-24T23:41:37ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neurology1664-22952010-11-01110.3389/fneur.2010.001372121Timing of sleep and its relationship with the endogenous melatonin rhythmTracey L Sletten0Simon Vincenzi1Jennifer R Redman2Steven W Lockley3Steven W Lockley4Shantha M Rajaratnam5Shantha M Rajaratnam6Monash UniversityMonash UniversityMonash UniversityMonash Universityand Division of Sleep Medicine, Harvard Medical SchoolMonash Universityand Division of Sleep Medicine, Harvard Medical SchoolWhile much research has investigated the effects of exogenous melatonin on sleep, less is known about the relationship between the timing of the endogenous melatonin rhythm and the sleep-wake cycle. Significant inter-individual variability in the phase relationship between sleep and melatonin rhythms has been reported although the extent to which the variability reflects intrinsic and/or environmental differences is unknown. We examined the effects of different sleeping schedules on the time of dim light melatonin onset (DLMO) in 28 young, healthy adults. Participants chose to maintain either an early (22:30 – 06:30 h) or a late (00:30 – 08:30 h) sleep schedule for at least three weeks prior to an overnight laboratory visit. Saliva samples were collected under dim light (<2 lux) and controlled posture conditions to determine salivary DLMO. The 2 hour difference between groups in the enforced sleep-wake schedule was associated with a concomitant 1.75 hour delay in DLMO. The mean phase relationship between sleep onset and DLMO remained constant (~2 hours). The variance in DLMO time, however, was greater in the late group (range 4.5 hours) compared to the early group (range 2.4 hours) perhaps due to greater effect of environmental influences in delayed sleep types or greater intrinsic instability in their circadian system. The findings contribute to our understanding of individual differences in the human circadian clock and have important implications for the diagnosis and treatment of circadian rhythm sleep disorders, in particular if a greater normative range for phase angle of entrainment occurs in individuals with later sleep-wake schedules.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fneur.2010.00137/fullCircadian RhythmSleepdiurnal preferenceDLMOmelatonin rhythmphase angle
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tracey L Sletten
Simon Vincenzi
Jennifer R Redman
Steven W Lockley
Steven W Lockley
Shantha M Rajaratnam
Shantha M Rajaratnam
spellingShingle Tracey L Sletten
Simon Vincenzi
Jennifer R Redman
Steven W Lockley
Steven W Lockley
Shantha M Rajaratnam
Shantha M Rajaratnam
Timing of sleep and its relationship with the endogenous melatonin rhythm
Frontiers in Neurology
Circadian Rhythm
Sleep
diurnal preference
DLMO
melatonin rhythm
phase angle
author_facet Tracey L Sletten
Simon Vincenzi
Jennifer R Redman
Steven W Lockley
Steven W Lockley
Shantha M Rajaratnam
Shantha M Rajaratnam
author_sort Tracey L Sletten
title Timing of sleep and its relationship with the endogenous melatonin rhythm
title_short Timing of sleep and its relationship with the endogenous melatonin rhythm
title_full Timing of sleep and its relationship with the endogenous melatonin rhythm
title_fullStr Timing of sleep and its relationship with the endogenous melatonin rhythm
title_full_unstemmed Timing of sleep and its relationship with the endogenous melatonin rhythm
title_sort timing of sleep and its relationship with the endogenous melatonin rhythm
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Neurology
issn 1664-2295
publishDate 2010-11-01
description While much research has investigated the effects of exogenous melatonin on sleep, less is known about the relationship between the timing of the endogenous melatonin rhythm and the sleep-wake cycle. Significant inter-individual variability in the phase relationship between sleep and melatonin rhythms has been reported although the extent to which the variability reflects intrinsic and/or environmental differences is unknown. We examined the effects of different sleeping schedules on the time of dim light melatonin onset (DLMO) in 28 young, healthy adults. Participants chose to maintain either an early (22:30 – 06:30 h) or a late (00:30 – 08:30 h) sleep schedule for at least three weeks prior to an overnight laboratory visit. Saliva samples were collected under dim light (<2 lux) and controlled posture conditions to determine salivary DLMO. The 2 hour difference between groups in the enforced sleep-wake schedule was associated with a concomitant 1.75 hour delay in DLMO. The mean phase relationship between sleep onset and DLMO remained constant (~2 hours). The variance in DLMO time, however, was greater in the late group (range 4.5 hours) compared to the early group (range 2.4 hours) perhaps due to greater effect of environmental influences in delayed sleep types or greater intrinsic instability in their circadian system. The findings contribute to our understanding of individual differences in the human circadian clock and have important implications for the diagnosis and treatment of circadian rhythm sleep disorders, in particular if a greater normative range for phase angle of entrainment occurs in individuals with later sleep-wake schedules.
topic Circadian Rhythm
Sleep
diurnal preference
DLMO
melatonin rhythm
phase angle
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fneur.2010.00137/full
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