Daytime eating prevents mood vulnerability in night work
Daytime eating prevents mood vulnerability in night work
Shift workers have a 25 to 40% higher risk of depression and anxiety partly due to a misalignment between the central circadian clock and daily environmental/behavioral cycles that may negatively affect mood and emotional well-being. Hence, evidence-based circadian interventions are required to prevent mood vulnerability in shift work settings. We used a stringently controlled 14-d circadian paradigm to assess mood vulnerability during simulated night work with either daytime and nighttime or daytime-only eating as compared with simulated day work (baseline). Simulated night work with daytime and nighttime eating increased depression-like mood levels by 26.2% (p-value adjusted using False Discovery Rates, pFDR = 0.001; effect-size r = 0.78) and anxiety-like mood levels by 16.1% (pFDR = 0.001; effect-size r = 0.47) compared to baseline, whereas this did not occur with simulated night work in the daytime-only eating group. Importantly, a larger degree of internal circadian misalignment was robustly associated with more depression-like (r = 0.77; P = 0.001) and anxiety-like (r = 0.67; P = 0.002) mood levels during simulated night work. These findings offer a proof-of-concept demonstration of an evidence-based meal timing intervention that may prevent mood vulnerability in shift work settings. Future studies are required to establish if changes in meal timing can prevent mood vulnerability in night workers.
e2206348119
Qian, Jingyi
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Vujovic, Nina
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Nguyen, Hoa
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Rahman, Nishath
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Heng, Su Wei
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Amira, Stephen
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Scheer, Frank A.J.L.
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Chellappa, Sarah L.
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Qian, Jingyi
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Vujovic, Nina
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Nguyen, Hoa
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Rahman, Nishath
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Heng, Su Wei
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Amira, Stephen
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Scheer, Frank A.J.L.
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Chellappa, Sarah L.
516582b5-3cba-4644-86c9-14c91a4510f2
Qian, Jingyi, Vujovic, Nina, Nguyen, Hoa, Rahman, Nishath, Heng, Su Wei, Amira, Stephen, Scheer, Frank A.J.L. and Chellappa, Sarah L.
(2022)
Daytime eating prevents mood vulnerability in night work.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 119 (38), .
(doi:10.1073/pnas.2206348119).
Abstract
Shift workers have a 25 to 40% higher risk of depression and anxiety partly due to a misalignment between the central circadian clock and daily environmental/behavioral cycles that may negatively affect mood and emotional well-being. Hence, evidence-based circadian interventions are required to prevent mood vulnerability in shift work settings. We used a stringently controlled 14-d circadian paradigm to assess mood vulnerability during simulated night work with either daytime and nighttime or daytime-only eating as compared with simulated day work (baseline). Simulated night work with daytime and nighttime eating increased depression-like mood levels by 26.2% (p-value adjusted using False Discovery Rates, pFDR = 0.001; effect-size r = 0.78) and anxiety-like mood levels by 16.1% (pFDR = 0.001; effect-size r = 0.47) compared to baseline, whereas this did not occur with simulated night work in the daytime-only eating group. Importantly, a larger degree of internal circadian misalignment was robustly associated with more depression-like (r = 0.77; P = 0.001) and anxiety-like (r = 0.67; P = 0.002) mood levels during simulated night work. These findings offer a proof-of-concept demonstration of an evidence-based meal timing intervention that may prevent mood vulnerability in shift work settings. Future studies are required to establish if changes in meal timing can prevent mood vulnerability in night workers.
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pnas.2206348119
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e-pub ahead of print date: 12 September 2022
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Local EPrints ID: 479532
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479532
ISSN: 0027-8424
PURE UUID: eed1e2d7-db17-46f2-a2cb-1e7d235bb37a
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Date deposited: 26 Jul 2023 16:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:20
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Author:
Jingyi Qian
Author:
Nina Vujovic
Author:
Hoa Nguyen
Author:
Nishath Rahman
Author:
Su Wei Heng
Author:
Stephen Amira
Author:
Frank A.J.L. Scheer
Author:
Sarah L. Chellappa
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