Diabetology & Metabolic Syndrome | |
Shift work and its association with metabolic disorders | |
Ticiana C. Rodrigues2  Gustavo Borchardt Bottega3  Claudia Carolina Schnorr3  Fábio Fernandes Dantas Filho1  Maria Carlota Borba Brum1  | |
[1] Post-graduate program in Medical Sciences, Endocrinology, Universidade Federal do, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil;Division of Endocrinology, Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre, Rua Ramiro, Barcelos 2350, Prédio 12, 4° andar, Porto Alegre 90035-003, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil;Department of Internal Medicine, Medical School, Universidade Federal do, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil | |
关键词: Insulin resistance; Sleep restriction; Hypertension; Diabetes; Metabolic syndrome; Obesity; Shift work; | |
Others : 1211823 DOI : 10.1186/s13098-015-0041-4 |
|
received in 2015-02-17, accepted in 2015-05-07, 发布年份 2015 | |
【 摘 要 】
Although the health burden of shift work has not been extensively studied, evidence suggests that it may affect the metabolic balance and cause obesity and other metabolic disorders. Sleep deprivation, circadian desynchronization and behavioral changes in diet and physical activity are among the most commonly mentioned factors in studies of the association between night work and metabolic disorders. Individual adaptation to night work depends greatly on personal factors such as family and social life, but occupational interventions may also make a positive contribution to the transition to shift work, such as exposure to bright lights during the night shift, melatonin use, shift regularity and clockwise rotation, and dietary adaptations for the metabolic needs of night workers. The evaluation of the impact of night work on health and of the mechanisms underlying this relationship can serve as a basis for intervention strategies to minimize the health burden of shift work. This review aimed to identify highlights regarding therapeutic implications following the association between night and shift work and metabolic disorders, as well as the mechanisms and pathways responsible for these relationships.
【 授权许可】
2015 Brum et al.; licensee BioMed Central.
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
---|---|---|---|
20150611031751783.pdf | 376KB | download |
【 参考文献 】
- [1]de C Moreno CR, Fischer FM, Rotenberg L: A saúde do trabalhador na sociedade 24 horas. São Paulo Em Perspect 2003, 17:34-46.
- [2]Organização Internacional do Trabalho: Convenção sobre Trabalho Noturno–C171, 1990, Genebra. http://www.ilo.org/dyn/normlex/en/f?p=NORMLEXPUB:12100:0::NO::P12100_ILO_CODE:C171.
- [3]Rodrigues VP: Principais impactos do trabalho em turnos: estudo de caso de uma sonda de perfuração marítima. R Un Alfenas 1998, 4:199-207.
- [4]Burchell B: European foundation for the improvement of living and working conditions. Working conditions in the European union: working time and work intensity. Office for Official Publications of the European Communities, Luxembourg; 2009.
- [5]Karlsson B: Is there an association between shift work and having a metabolic syndrome? results from a population based study of 27 485 people. Occup Environ Med 2001, 58:747-52.
- [6]De Bacquer D, Van Risseghem M, Clays E, Kittel F, De Backer G, Braeckman L: Rotating shift work and the metabolic syndrome: a prospective study. Int J Epidemiol 2009, 38:848-54.
- [7]Morikawa Y, Nakagawa H, Miura K, Soyama Y, Ishizaki M, Kido T, et al.: Shift work and the risk of diabetes mellitus among Japanese male factory workers. Scand J Work Environ Health 2005, 31:179-83.
- [8]Froy O: The relationship between nutrition and circadian rhythms in mammals. Front Neuroendocrinol 2007, 28:61-71.
- [9]Vyas MV, Garg AX, Iansavichus AV, Costella J, Donner A, Laugsand LE, et al.: Shift work and vascular events: systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ 2012, 345:e4800-0.
- [10]Pimenta AM, Kac G, Souza RR, Ferreira LM, Silqueira SM: Trabalho noturno e risco cardiovascular em funcionários de universidade pública. Rev Assoc Médica Bras 2012, 58:168-77.
- [11]De Gaudemaris R, Levant A, Ehlinger V, Hérin F, Lepage B, Soulat J-M, et al.: Blood pressure and working conditions in hospital nurses and nursing assistants. The ORSOSA study. Arch Cardiovasc Dis 2011, 104:97-103.
- [12]Thomas C, Power C: Shift work and risk factors for cardiovascular disease: a study at age 45 years in the 1958 British birth cohort. Eur J Epidemiol 2010, 25:305-14.
- [13]Suwazono Y, Dochi M, Sakata K, Okubo Y, Oishi M, Tanaka K, et al.: Shift work is a risk factor for increased blood pressure in Japanese Men: a 14-year historical cohort study. Hypertension 2008, 52:581-6.
- [14]Gallup Organization: Sleep in America. Gallup Organization; 1995. National Center for Health Statistics. QuickStats: percentage of adults who reported an average of < 6 hours of sleep per 24 hour period, by sex and age group – United States, 1985 and 2004 MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2005, 54:933.
- [15]Gangwisch JE, Malaspina D, Boden-Albala B, Heymsfield SB: Inadequate sleep as a risk factor for obesity: analyses of the NHANES I. Sleep 2005, 28:1289-96.
- [16]Canuto R, Pattussi MP, Macagnan JBA, Henn RL, Olinto MTA: Sleep deprivation and obesity in shift workers in southern Brazil. Public Health Nutr 2014, 17:2619-23.
- [17]Itani O, Kaneita Y, Murata A, Yokoyama E, Ohida T: Association of onset of obesity with sleep duration and shift work among Japanese adults. Sleep Med 2011, 12:341-5.
- [18]Van Drongelen A, Boot CRL, Merkus SL, Smid T, van der Beek AJ: The effects of shift work on body weight change - a systematic review of longitudinal studies. Scand J Work Environ Health 2011, 37:263-75.
- [19]Di Lorenzo L, De Pergola G, Zocchetti C, L’Abbate N, Basso A, Pannacciulli N, et al.: Effect of shift work on body mass index: results of a study performed in 319 glucose-tolerant men working in a Southern Italian industry. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord J Int Assoc Study Obes 2003, 27:1353-8.
- [20]Van Amelsvoort LGPM, Schouten EG, Kok FJ: Impact of one year of shift work on cardiovascular disease risk factors. J Occup Environ Med Am Coll Occup Environ Med 2004, 46:699-706.
- [21]Hannerz H, Albertsen K, Nielsen ML, Tuchsen F, Burr H: Occupational factors and 5-year weight change among men in a danish national cohort. Health Psychol Off J Div Health Psychol Am Psychol Assoc 2004, 23:283-8.
- [22]Lin Y-C, Hsiao T-J, Chen P-C: Persistent rotating shift-work exposure accelerates development of metabolic syndrome among middle-aged female employees: a five-year follow-up. Chronobiol Int 2009, 26:740-55.
- [23]Al-Naimi S, Hampton SM, Richard P, Tzung C, Morgan LM: Postprandial metabolic profiles following meals and snacks eaten during simulated night and day shift work. Chronobiol Int 2004, 21:937-47.
- [24]Guo Y, Rong Y, Huang X, Lai H, Luo X, Zhang Z, et al.: Shift work and the relationship with metabolic syndrome in Chinese aged workers. In PLoS One Edited by Behrens T. 2015, e0120632.
- [25]Kawabe Y, Nakamura Y, Kikuchi S, Murakami Y, Tanaka T, Takebayashi T, et al.: Relationship between shift work and clustering of the metabolic syndrome diagnostic components. J Atheroscler Thromb 2014, 21:703-11.
- [26]Canuto R, Garcez AS, Olinto MTA: Metabolic syndrome and shift work: a systematic review. Sleep Med Rev 2013, 17:425-31.
- [27]Pan A, Schernhammer ES, Sun Q, Hu FB: Rotating night shift work and risk of type 2 diabetes: Two prospective cohort studies in women. PLoS Med 2011., 8Article ID e1001141
- [28]Kroenke CH, Spiegelman D, Manson J, Schernhammer ES, Colditz GA, Kawachi I: Work characteristics and incidence of type 2 diabetes in women. Am J Epidemiol 2006, 27(165):175-83.
- [29]Ika K, Suzuki E, Mitsuhashi T, Takao S, Doi H: Shift work and diabetes mellitus among male workers in Japan: does the intensity of shift work matter? Acta Med Okayama 2013, 67:25-33.
- [30]Kivimäki M, Batty GD, Hublin C: Shift work as a risk factor for future type 2 diabetes: evidence, mechanisms, implications, and future research directions. PLoS Med 2011, 8:e100-138.
- [31]Rodrigues TC, Canani LHS: A influência do turno de trabalho em pacientes com diabetes mellitus tipo 2. Rev Assoc Médica Bras 2008, 54:160-2.
- [32]Young J, Waclawski E, Young JA, Spencer J: Control of type 1 diabetes mellitus and shift work. Occup Med 2013, 63:70-2.
- [33]Gale JE, Cox HI, Qian J, Block GD, Colwell CS, Matveyenko AV: Disruption of circadian rhythms accelerates development of diabetes through pancreatic beta-cell loss and dysfunction. J Biol Rhythms 2011, 26:423-33.
- [34]Buxton OM, Cain SW, O’Connor SP, Porter JH, Duffy JF, Wang W, et al.: Adverse metabolic consequences in humans of prolonged sleep restriction combined with circadian disruption. Sci Transl Med 2012, 4:129-143.
- [35]Van Cauter E: Sleep disturbances and insulin resistance. Diabet Med J Br Diabet Assoc 2011, 28:1455-62.
- [36]Kalsbeek A, la Fleur S, Fliers E: Circadian control of glucose metabolism. Mol Metab 2014, 3:372-83.
- [37]Perez-Tilve D, Stern JE, Tschöp M: The brain and the metabolic syndrome: not a wireless connection. Endocrinology 2006, 147:1136-9.
- [38]Cappuccio FP, D'Elia L, Strazzullo P, Miller MA: Quantity and quality of sleep and incidence of type 2 diabetes: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Diabetes Care 2010, 33:414-20.
- [39]Garaulet M, Ordovás JM, Madrid JA: The chronobiology, etiology and pathophysiology of obesity. Int J Obes 2010, 34:1667-83.
- [40]Patel SR, Hu FB: Short sleep duration and weight gain: a systematic review. Obesity 2008, 16:643-53.
- [41]Jean-Louis G, Williams NJ, Sarpong D, Pandey A, Youngstedt S, Zizi F, et al.: Associations between inadequate sleep and obesity in the US adult population: analysis of the national health interview survey (1977–2009). BMC Public Health 2014, 14:290. BioMed Central Full Text
- [42]Taheri S, Lin L, Austin D, Young T, Mignot E: Short sleep duration is associated with reduced leptin, elevated ghrelin, and increased body mass index. PLoS Med 2004., 1Article ID e62
- [43]Chaput J-P, Després J-P, Bouchard C, Tremblay A: Short sleep duration is associated with reduced leptin levels and increased adiposity: results from the Québec family study*. Obesity 2007, 15:253-61.
- [44]Haus E, Smolensky M: Biological clocks and shift work: circadian dysregulation and potential long-term effects. Cancer Causes Control 2006, 17:489-500.
- [45]Antunes LC, Levandovski R, Dantas G, Caumo W, Hidalgo MP: Obesity and shift work: chronobiological aspects. Nutr Res Rev 2010, 23:155-68.
- [46]Morris CJ, Aeschbach D, Scheer FAJL: Circadian system, sleep and endocrinology. Mol Cell Endocrinol 2012, 349:91-104.
- [47]Qin L-Q, Li J, Wang Y, Wang J, Xu J-Y, Kaneko T: The effects of nocturnal life on endocrine circadian patterns in healthy adults. Life Sci 2003, 73:2467-75.
- [48]Scott EM, Grant PJ: Neel revisited: the adipocyte, seasonality and type 2 diabetes. Diabetologia 2006, 49:1462-6.
- [49]Spiegel K, Tasali E, Penev P, Van Cauter E: Brief communication: sleep curtailment in healthy young men is associated with decreased leptin levels, elevated ghrelin levels, and increased hunger and appetite. Ann Intern Med 2004, 141:846-50.
- [50]Correa-Silva SR, de Sá LBPC, Lengyel A-MJ: Ghrelina e secretagogos do hormônio de crescimento (GHS): modulação da secreção do hormônio de crescimento e perspectivas terapêuticas. Arq Bras Endocrinol Metabol 2008, 52:726-33.
- [51]Nedeltcheva AV, Kessler L, Imperial J, Penev PD: Exposure to recurrent sleep restriction in the setting of high caloric intake and physical inactivity results in increased insulin resistance and reduced glucose tolerance. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2009, 94:3242-50.
- [52]Crowley SJ, Lee C, Tseng CY, Fogg LF, Eastman CI: Combinations of bright light, scheduled dark, sunglasses, and melatonin to facilitate circadian entrainment to night shift work. J Biol Rhythms 2003, 18(6):513-23.
- [53]Rajaratnam SMW, Howard ME, Grunstein RR: Sleep loss and circadian disruption in shift work: health burden and management. Med J Aust 2013, 199:S11-5.
- [54]Van Someren EJW, Riemersma-Van Der Lek RF: Live to the rhythm, slave to the rhythm. Sleep Med Rev 2007, 11:465-84.
- [55]Knutsson A: Health disorders of shift workers. Occup Med 2003, 53:103-8.