Night work, light exposure and melatonin on work days and days off

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Night work, light exposure and melatonin on work days and days off. / Daugaard, Stine; Garde, Anne Helene; Bonde, Jens Peter Ellekilde; Christoffersen, Jens; Hansen, Äse Marie; Markvart, Jakob; Schlünssen, Vivi; Skene, Debra J.; Vistisen, Helene Tilma; Kolstad, Henrik A.

In: Chronobiology International, Vol. 34, No. 7, 2017, p. 942-955.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Daugaard, S, Garde, AH, Bonde, JPE, Christoffersen, J, Hansen, ÄM, Markvart, J, Schlünssen, V, Skene, DJ, Vistisen, HT & Kolstad, HA 2017, 'Night work, light exposure and melatonin on work days and days off', Chronobiology International, vol. 34, no. 7, pp. 942-955. https://doi.org/10.1080/07420528.2017.1327867

APA

Daugaard, S., Garde, A. H., Bonde, J. P. E., Christoffersen, J., Hansen, Ä. M., Markvart, J., Schlünssen, V., Skene, D. J., Vistisen, H. T., & Kolstad, H. A. (2017). Night work, light exposure and melatonin on work days and days off. Chronobiology International, 34(7), 942-955. https://doi.org/10.1080/07420528.2017.1327867

Vancouver

Daugaard S, Garde AH, Bonde JPE, Christoffersen J, Hansen ÄM, Markvart J et al. Night work, light exposure and melatonin on work days and days off. Chronobiology International. 2017;34(7):942-955. https://doi.org/10.1080/07420528.2017.1327867

Author

Daugaard, Stine ; Garde, Anne Helene ; Bonde, Jens Peter Ellekilde ; Christoffersen, Jens ; Hansen, Äse Marie ; Markvart, Jakob ; Schlünssen, Vivi ; Skene, Debra J. ; Vistisen, Helene Tilma ; Kolstad, Henrik A. / Night work, light exposure and melatonin on work days and days off. In: Chronobiology International. 2017 ; Vol. 34, No. 7. pp. 942-955.

Bibtex

@article{6f5216c841ee49a7b5da8d7239308d37,
title = "Night work, light exposure and melatonin on work days and days off",
abstract = "We aimed to examine the effects of night work on salivary melatonin concentration during and subsequent to night work and the mediating role of light. We included 254 day workers and 87 night workers who were followed during 322 work days and 301 days off work. Each day was defined as the 24 hour period starting from the beginning of a night shift or from waking in the mornings with day work and days off. Light levels were recorded and synchronized with diary information (start and end of sleep and work). On average, participants provided four saliva samples per day, and these were analyzed for melatonin concentration by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Differences between day and night workers on work days and days off were assessed with multilevel regression models with melatonin concentration as the primary outcome. All models were stratified or adjusted by time of day. For light exposure, we estimated the total, direct and indirect effects of night work on melatonin concentrations obtaining 95% confidence intervals through bootstrapping. On work days, night workers showed 15% lower salivary melatonin concentrations compared with day workers (-15.0%; 95% CI: -31.4%; 5.2%). During the night, light exposure mediated a melatonin suppression of approximately 6% (-5.9%, 95% CI: -10.2%; -1.5%). No mediating effect of light was seen during the day time. On days off, we observed no difference in melatonin concentrations between day and night workers. These findings are in accordance with a transient and partly light-mediated effect of night work on melatonin production.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Stine Daugaard and Garde, {Anne Helene} and Bonde, {Jens Peter Ellekilde} and Jens Christoffersen and Hansen, {{\"A}se Marie} and Jakob Markvart and Vivi Schl{\"u}nssen and Skene, {Debra J.} and Vistisen, {Helene Tilma} and Kolstad, {Henrik A.}",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1080/07420528.2017.1327867",
language = "English",
volume = "34",
pages = "942--955",
journal = "Chronobiology International",
issn = "0742-0528",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Night work, light exposure and melatonin on work days and days off

AU - Daugaard, Stine

AU - Garde, Anne Helene

AU - Bonde, Jens Peter Ellekilde

AU - Christoffersen, Jens

AU - Hansen, Äse Marie

AU - Markvart, Jakob

AU - Schlünssen, Vivi

AU - Skene, Debra J.

AU - Vistisen, Helene Tilma

AU - Kolstad, Henrik A.

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - We aimed to examine the effects of night work on salivary melatonin concentration during and subsequent to night work and the mediating role of light. We included 254 day workers and 87 night workers who were followed during 322 work days and 301 days off work. Each day was defined as the 24 hour period starting from the beginning of a night shift or from waking in the mornings with day work and days off. Light levels were recorded and synchronized with diary information (start and end of sleep and work). On average, participants provided four saliva samples per day, and these were analyzed for melatonin concentration by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Differences between day and night workers on work days and days off were assessed with multilevel regression models with melatonin concentration as the primary outcome. All models were stratified or adjusted by time of day. For light exposure, we estimated the total, direct and indirect effects of night work on melatonin concentrations obtaining 95% confidence intervals through bootstrapping. On work days, night workers showed 15% lower salivary melatonin concentrations compared with day workers (-15.0%; 95% CI: -31.4%; 5.2%). During the night, light exposure mediated a melatonin suppression of approximately 6% (-5.9%, 95% CI: -10.2%; -1.5%). No mediating effect of light was seen during the day time. On days off, we observed no difference in melatonin concentrations between day and night workers. These findings are in accordance with a transient and partly light-mediated effect of night work on melatonin production.

AB - We aimed to examine the effects of night work on salivary melatonin concentration during and subsequent to night work and the mediating role of light. We included 254 day workers and 87 night workers who were followed during 322 work days and 301 days off work. Each day was defined as the 24 hour period starting from the beginning of a night shift or from waking in the mornings with day work and days off. Light levels were recorded and synchronized with diary information (start and end of sleep and work). On average, participants provided four saliva samples per day, and these were analyzed for melatonin concentration by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Differences between day and night workers on work days and days off were assessed with multilevel regression models with melatonin concentration as the primary outcome. All models were stratified or adjusted by time of day. For light exposure, we estimated the total, direct and indirect effects of night work on melatonin concentrations obtaining 95% confidence intervals through bootstrapping. On work days, night workers showed 15% lower salivary melatonin concentrations compared with day workers (-15.0%; 95% CI: -31.4%; 5.2%). During the night, light exposure mediated a melatonin suppression of approximately 6% (-5.9%, 95% CI: -10.2%; -1.5%). No mediating effect of light was seen during the day time. On days off, we observed no difference in melatonin concentrations between day and night workers. These findings are in accordance with a transient and partly light-mediated effect of night work on melatonin production.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1080/07420528.2017.1327867

DO - 10.1080/07420528.2017.1327867

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28613972

VL - 34

SP - 942

EP - 955

JO - Chronobiology International

JF - Chronobiology International

SN - 0742-0528

IS - 7

ER -

ID: 183246974