In vivo molecular chronotyping, circadian misalignment, and high rates of depression in young adults

Mar 18, 2019Journal of affective disorders

Body Clock Timing, Sleep-Wake Mismatch, and High Depression Rates in Young Adults

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Abstract

Depression scores are significantly higher in young adults with circadian phase delays.

  • Evening-type individuals with circadian phase delays are 20 times more likely to be depressed compared to control individuals.
  • Individuals with a mismatch between their circadian behavioral traits and molecular clock phase are 5-8 times more likely to experience depression.
  • Sleep disturbance is associated with circadian phenotypes, but mood effects are independent of sleep duration, social jetlag, and gender.
  • The study examined circadian rhythms using clock gene mRNA levels in hair follicles to assess phase alignment.
  • Findings suggest that circadian misalignment may be an under-appreciated risk factor for depression in young adults.

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