collection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34792177/association-between-insomnia-patients-pre-treatment-characteristics-and-their-responses-to-distinctive-treatment-sequences
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jack D Edinger, Simon Beaulieu-Bonneau, Hans Ivers, Bernard Guay, Lynda Bélanger, Bryan Simmons, Charles M Morin
STUDY OBJECTIVES: It is common to provide insomnia patients a second treatment when the initial treatment fails, but little is known about optimal treatment sequences for different patient types. This study examined whether pre-treatment characteristics/traits predict optimal treatment sequences for insomnia patients. METHODS: A community sample of 211 adults (132 women; Mage = 45.6 ± 14.9 years) with insomnia were recruited. Patients were first treated with behavioral therapy (BT) or zolpidem (Zol)...
November 18, 2021: Sleep
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34324837/the-microbiota-coordinates-diurnal-rhythms-in-innate-immunity-with-the-circadian-clock
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John F Brooks, Cassie L Behrendt, Kelly A Ruhn, Syann Lee, Prithvi Raj, Joseph S Takahashi, Lora V Hooper
Environmental light cycles entrain circadian feeding behaviors in animals that produce rhythms in exposure to foodborne bacteria. Here, we show that the intestinal microbiota generates diurnal rhythms in innate immunity that synchronize with feeding rhythms to anticipate microbial exposure. Rhythmic expression of antimicrobial proteins was driven by daily rhythms in epithelial attachment by segmented filamentous bacteria (SFB), members of the mouse intestinal microbiota. Rhythmic SFB attachment was driven by the circadian clock through control of feeding rhythms...
August 5, 2021: Cell
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33511735/sleep-and-covid-19-the-history-of-sleep-chronobiology-and-insomnia
#3
EDITORIAL
Dieter Riemann
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
February 2021: Journal of Sleep Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33383648/later-meal-and-sleep-timing-predicts-higher-percent-body-fat
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elizabeth A Thomas, Adnin Zaman, Marc-Andre Cornier, Victoria A Catenacci, Emma J Tussey, Laura Grau, Jaron Arbet, Josiane L Broussard, Corey A Rynders
Accumulating evidence suggests that later timing of energy intake (EI) is associated with increased risk of obesity. In this study, 83 individuals with overweight and obesity underwent assessment of a 7-day period of data collection, including measures of body weight and body composition (DXA) and 24-h measures of EI (photographic food records), sleep (actigraphy), and physical activity (PA, activity monitors) for 7 days. Relationships between body mass index (BMI) and percent body fat (DXA) with meal timing, sleep, and PA were examined...
December 29, 2020: Nutrients
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33530881/intermittent-fasting-contributes-to-aligned-circadian-rhythms-through-interactions-with-the-gut-microbiome
#5
REVIEW
M C Daas, N M de Roos
The timing of food consumption is considered to be an important modulator of circadian rhythms, regulating a wide range of physiological processes which are vital to human health. The exact mechanisms underlying this relationship are not fully understood, but likely involve alterations in the structure and functioning of the gut microbiome. Therefore, this narrative review aims to clarify these mechanisms by focusing on intermittent fasting as a dietary strategy of food timing. A literature search identified 4 clinical and 18 preclinical studies that examined either (1) the impact of intermittent fasting on the gut microbiome, or (2) whether circadian rhythms of the host are subject to changes in the bacterial populations in the gut...
April 12, 2021: Beneficial Microbes
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33212927/the-sleeping-brain-harnessing-the-power-of-the-glymphatic-system-through-lifestyle-choices
#6
REVIEW
Oliver Cameron Reddy, Ysbrand D van der Werf
The glymphatic system is a "pseudo-lymphatic" perivascular network distributed throughout the brain, responsible for replenishing as well as cleansing the brain. Glymphatic clearance is the macroscopic process of convective fluid transport in which harmful interstitial metabolic waste products are removed from the brain intima. This paper addresses the glymphatic system, its dysfunction and the major consequences of impaired clearance in order to link neurodegeneration and glymphatic activity with lifestyle choices...
November 17, 2020: Brain Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33294910/expression-of-concern-changes-in-brain-derived-neurotrophic-factor-expression-influence-sleep-wake-activity-and-homeostatic-regulation-of-rapid-eye-movement-sleep
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer M Garner, Jonathan Chambers, Abigail K Barnes, Subimal Datta
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
December 9, 2020: Sleep
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33295989/autonomic-dysregulation-and-sleep-homeostasis-in-insomnia
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniela Grimaldi, Kathryn J Reid, Nelly A Papalambros, Rosemary I Braun, Roneil G Malkani, Sabra M Abbott, Jason C Ong, Phyllis C Zee
STUDY OBJECTIVES: Insomnia is common in older adults, and is associated with poor health, including cognitive impairment and cardio-metabolic disease. Although the mechanisms linking insomnia with these comorbidities remain unclear, age-related changes in sleep and autonomic nervous system (ANS) regulation might represent a shared mechanistic pathway. In this study, we assessed the relationship between ANS activity with indices of objective and subjective sleep quality in older adults with insomnia...
June 11, 2021: Sleep
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22560640/shift-work-and-the-assessment-and-management-of-shift-work-disorder-swd
#9
REVIEW
Kenneth P Wright, Richard K Bogan, James K Wyatt
Nearly 20% of the labor force worldwide, work shifts that include work hours outside 07:00 h to 18:00 h. Shift work is common in many occupations that directly affect the health and safety of others (e.g., protective services, transportation, healthcare), whereas quality of life, health, and safety during shift work and the commute home can affect workers in any field. Increasing evidence indicates that shift-work schedules negatively influence worker physiology, health, and safety. Shift work disrupts circadian sleep and alerting cycles, resulting in disturbed daytime sleep and excessive sleepiness during the work shift...
February 2013: Sleep Medicine Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33274389/residual-differential-neurobehavioral-deficits-linger-after-multiple-recovery-nights-following-chronic-sleep-restriction-or-acute-total-sleep-deprivation
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Erika M Yamazaki, Caroline A Antler, Charlotte R Lasek, Namni Goel
STUDY OBJECTIVES: The amount of recovery sleep needed to fully restore well-established neurobehavioral deficits from sleep loss remains unknown, as does whether the recovery pattern differs across measures after total sleep deprivation (TSD) and chronic sleep restriction (SR). METHODS: In total, 83 adults received two baseline nights (10-12-hour time in bed [TIB]) followed by five 4-hour TIB SR nights or 36-hour TSD and four recovery nights (R1-R4; 12-hour TIB)...
November 6, 2020: Sleep
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27112296/night-watch-in-one-brain-hemisphere-during-sleep-associated-with-the-first-night-effect-in-humans
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Masako Tamaki, Ji Won Bang, Takeo Watanabe, Yuka Sasaki
We often experience troubled sleep in a novel environment [1]. This is called the first-night effect (FNE) in human sleep research and has been regarded as a typical sleep disturbance [2-4]. Here, we show that the FNE is a manifestation of one hemisphere being more vigilant than the other as a night watch to monitor unfamiliar surroundings during sleep [5, 6]. Using advanced neuroimaging techniques [7, 8] as well as polysomnography, we found that the temporary sleep disturbance in the first sleep experimental session involves regional interhemispheric asymmetry of sleep depth [9]...
May 9, 2016: Current Biology: CB
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