Detalhes do Documento

The impact of daylight‐saving time (DST) on patients with delayed sleep‐wake phase disorder (DSWPD)

Autor(es): Reis, Cátia ; Pilz, Luísa K. ; Kramer, Achim ; Lopes, Luísa V. ; Paiva, Teresa ; Roenneberg, Till

Data: 2023

Identificador Persistente: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.14/40740

Origem: Veritati - Repositório Institucional da Universidade Católica Portuguesa

Assunto(s): DLMO; Local time; Solar time; Chronotype; DSWPD; Phase angle


Descrição

Due to time zones, sun time and local time rarely match. The difference between local and sun time, which we designate by Solar Jet Lag (SoJL), depends on location within a time zone and can range from zero to several hours. Daylight Saving Time (DST) simply adds one hour to SoJL, independent of location. We hypothesized that the impact of DST, is particularly problematic in patients with Delayed Sleep-Wake Phase Disorder (DSWPD), worsening their sleep debt. DSWPD is characterized by a chronic misalignment between the internal and social timing, reflected by an inability to fall asleep and wakeup at conventional or socially acceptable times. We analysed the clinical records of 162 DSWPD patients from a sleep medicine centre in Lisbon, Portugal (GMTzone), and separated them into two groups: the ones diagnosed across DST or Standard Time (ST). We included 82 patients (54.9% male; age: median [Q1, Q3] 34.5 [25.0, 45.3]; range 16-92; 54 in DST and 28 in ST) who had Dim Light Melatonin Onset (DLMO) measured as a marker for the circadian phase and sleep timing (onset, SO, mid-point, MS and end, SE) self-reported separately for work- and work-free days. Differences between ST and DST were compared using Mann-Whitney or Student's t tests. On a weekly average, patients in DST slept an hour less (62 min. p

Tipo de Documento Artigo científico
Idioma Inglês
Contribuidor(es) Veritati
Licença CC
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