Sleep Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effects of Bright Light Intervention for Adaptation to Night Work: Shift Work Simulation Experiments
The project will contribute with new knowledge concerning how aspects of the physical work environment (lighting conditions) can be arranged to facilitate the workers' adaptation to night work. This is important given the reported adverse consequences of shift work for performance, safety, and health. The project involves a series of three experimental, laboratory based shift work simulation studies. The aim is to investigate how different lighting conditions (intensities and colour temperature), administered through light emitting diode (LED) based bright light integrated standard room lighting, affects adaptation to three consecutive simulated night shifts and re adaptation to a day oriented schedule on measures of alertness, cognitive performance, sleep and circadian rhythm. The proposed project examines the effects of interventions that can be applied in naturalistic settings and will be based on new laboratory infrastructure available at the laboratories situated in the Faculty of Psychology, University of Bergen.
Bright light has been suggested as a countermeasure to the negative impact of night work in
terms of safety, performance and subsequent sleep. The effect depends on the timing of light
(e.g, phase-response curve), duration of light exposure and the intensity of light, as well
as the wavelengths that are emitted. Exposure to bright light (more intense than typical room
lightning), at evening and night, has been effective in delaying the circadian rhythm to
sufficiently adapt to night work both in simulated night work, and in field studies of
workers. Blue light has significantly stronger phase shifting effects than other wavelengths
of the visible spectrum. The effect of light on the circadian system is mediated by retinal
photoresponsive cell population (intrinsically photoresponsive retinal ganglion cells; ipRGC)
that contains the photopigment melanopsin, highly sensitive to blue light. These cells signal
directly to the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) of the hypothalamus, the circadian pacemaker.
Bright light has also been reported to improve alertness and performance during night shifts.
To the best of the investigators knowledge, no shift work simulation study has made the full
advance of LED-technology in terms of using light administered via standard room lighting on
adaptation to night work. Today, new LED-technology represents an excellent opportunity to
study this as roof mounted LED-sources integrated as standard indoor lightening can be
programmed to provide a wide range of light intensities and colour temperatures. LED-sources
have the advantage over standard light therapy that subjects can be exposed to the therapy
via standard room lightening (not confined to a special therapy lamp) thereby allowing the
workers to conduct work tasks as normal during light exposure.
Against this backdrop this project aims to investigate how different lighting conditions,
administered through LED-based bright light integrated standard room lighting, affects
adaptation to three consecutive simulated night shifts and re adaptation to a day oriented
schedule on measures of alertness, cognitive performance, sleep and circadian rhythm. In
addition, measures of mood, appetite, heart rate variability (HRV), pain sensitivity, moral
reasoning, and inflammatory markers will be examined. The researchers also aim to investigate
the effects of two extreme monochromatic light conditions (blue vs. red) based on integrated
standard room lighting on the adaptation to one simulated night shift.
Study participants will work simulated night shifts (11:00 pm to 07:00 am) in a light
laboratory where light parameters (intensity and colour temperature) can be manipulated via
roof mounted LED-sources integrated as standard indoor lightening. Participants will be
recruited among students at the University of Bergen, and a screening will be done to ensure
healthy participants fit for the study. The included participants will take part in
experiments with two bouts of three consecutive simulated night shifts (6 nights in total).
HRV will be measured throughout the night shift, and five times, approx. every 1.5 hour
(11:30 pm, 01:00 am, 02:30 am, 04:00 am, 05:30 am), the subjects will be tested on a test
battery of cognitive tests and will rate their subjective sleepiness. Sleep will be assessed
by sleep diary and actigraphy 3 days prior to, during, and 3 days following the shifts. One
day before the night shift and the day after the night shift period the circadian rhythm will
be measured by saliva samples for estimation of dim light melatonin onset. Prior to-, during-
and after the night shifts, participants will undergo a pain sensitivity test. Blood spot
samples will be collected at the beginning and the end of each night shift for analysis of
inflammatory markers (e.g. interleukins).
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