Does the circadian clock drift when pilots fly multiple transpacific flights with 1- to 2-day layovers?

Jun 3, 2016Chronobiology international

Does the body’s internal clock shift during repeated transpacific flights with short layovers?

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Abstract

An average circadian period of 24.6 hours was observed in pilots during transmeridian flights.

  • Pilots experienced circadian and sleep disruptions on trips with multiple transmeridian flights.
  • Total in-flight sleep of relief crew may have decreased across successive East Coast USA-Japan flights.
  • PVT response speed was faster during later flights in the trip sequence on East Coast USA-Japan routes.
  • PVT response speeds were slower on the final flight compared to the initial flight on Japan-East Coast USA routes.
  • Twelve pilots resumed a single nocturnal sleep pattern post-trip, while others showed patterns of split sleep.
  • Chi-square analyses indicated potential full adaptation to Eastern Daylight Time from the first post-trip day, though split sleep patterns suggest more complexity.

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