Tolerance to shift work and adaptability to shifting schedules an issue of growing importance in industrialized society. We studied 40 registered nurses, 20 on fixed day shifts and 20 on fixed night-shifts, to assess whether workers with rapidly shifting schedules were able to adapt their melatonin secretion and sleep-wake cycles. The day-shift worked 5 days with 2 days off and the night-shift worked 3 nights with 2 off. All night-shift personnel acknowledged shifting back to daytime schedules on their days off. Sleep-wake was determined by sleep logs and actigraphy. To measure 6 sulfato xymelatonin levels, urine was collected at 2-hour intervals on the last work day and on the last day off. Night-shift workers slept significantly more on days off. Napping on the job occurred in 9/20 night-shift workers (mean 114 minutes) between 3 and 6 a.m. The acrophase of 6-sulfatoxymelatonin in day- shift nurses occurred at similar times on workdays and off days. In night shift nurses, the acrophase was about 7 a.m. on days off, but had a random distribution on workdays. Further analysis revealed two subgroups of night- shift nurses: six subjects (group A) demonstrated a rapid shift in melatonin secretion (acrophase at near 12 noon on work days and at near 7 a.m. on days off) while 14 nurses (group B) did not shift. Group A nurses slept more in the daytime on work days and their total sleep time was the same as day shift nurses. Group A was slightly younger and was composed solely of women (there were nine women and five men in group B). Age may be a factor in the ability to adapt to rapidly shifting schedules.
CITATION STYLE
Quera-Salva, M. A., Defrance, R., Claustrat, B., De Lattre, J., & Guilleminault, C. (1996). Rapid shift in sleep time and acrophase of melatonin secretion in short shift work schedule. Sleep, 19(7), 539–543. https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/19.7.539
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