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Journal Article

Citation

Ashkenazi IE, Reinberg AE, Motohashi Y. Chronobiol. Int. 1997; 14(2): 99-113.

Affiliation

Department of Human Genetics, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Israel.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1997, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9095371

Abstract

Interindividual variability in the human temporal structure is seldom taken into account, especially in studies devoted to the effects of shiftwork and jet lag. The understated postulate is that humans can be treated as a pure strain species. This paper reviews some facts and concepts with special reference to interindividual changes in the rhythm period tau and the resulting dyschronism. The following points are addressed. (1) Subjects and methods (importance of longitudinal field studies on shift workers). (2) Criteria for tolerance to shiftwork and jet lag. (3) Interindividual differences and shiftwork problems (subject type; the association between good shiftwork tolerance and stable temporal structure; dychronism with tau s differing from 24h and from variable to variable. (4) The genetic background of circadian dyschronism. The Dian-circadian genetic model of biological rhythms. It allows understanding of one's susceptibility to dyschronism, which was actually observed in approximately equal to 30% of subjects studied longitudinally. (5) Practical implications of interindividual differences (dissociate problems of passengers after a transmeridian flight-who have to adjust their temporal structure to local time-from problems of shiftworkers-who need to prevent alteration of their temporal structure; the advantage for the latter of participating in a rapid rotation system rather than a weekly rotation; emphasis that the suitability of a given subject for a given shiftworking condition is likely to be estimated only after a trial span of time including longitudinal study of a set of rhythms.


Language: en

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