Shift rotation, circadian misalignment and excessive body weight influence psychomotor performance: a prospective and observational study under real life conditions

Dec 20, 2019Scientific reports

Shift work, body clock mismatch, and extra weight affect thinking and movement skills in everyday life

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Abstract

Thirty males working rotating shifts showed more lapses in attention on the seventh day of their schedule compared to earlier days.

  • Lapses in attention were significantly influenced by shift timing, body mass index (BMI), and characteristics of the rest-activity rhythm.
  • Obese individuals had a higher number of attention lapses compared to those with normal weight.
  • Less synchronized individuals experienced more lapses in attention on the seventh day compared to the first day.
  • More fragmented rest-activity patterns were associated with increased lapses in attention on the seventh day compared to the sixth day.

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Key numbers

2.51
Increase in lapses in attention
Average lapses in attention for obese individuals during shifts
2.68
Lapses in attention on last shift day
Average lapses in attention on D7 compared to earlier days

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What this is

  • This research evaluates how shift work rotation, , and obesity affect psychomotor performance.
  • Conducted with 30 male shift workers in Brazil, it assesses performance over a complete shift rotation schedule.
  • The study finds significant effects of body mass index (BMI), shift day, and circadian rhythm stability on attention lapses.

Essence

  • Higher BMI, lower synchronization, and greater fragmentation of rest-activity patterns increase lapses in attention among shift workers. Obese individuals show more attention lapses than eutrophic individuals, particularly on the last day of night shifts.

Key takeaways

  • Obese individuals have more lapses in attention compared to eutrophic individuals, with averages of 2.51 and 1.07 lapses, respectively.
  • Lapses in attention peak on the last day of the shift schedule, with an average of 2.68 lapses on D7 compared to 0.56 on D1.
  • Circadian rhythm synchronization affects performance; less synchronized individuals experience more attention lapses on the final shift day.

Caveats

  • The study's sample consists solely of male workers, limiting generalizability to the broader population.
  • Data quality depended on participant compliance with testing protocols and device usage.

Definitions

  • Circadian misalignment: Desynchronization between the body's internal clock and external time cues, affecting sleep and performance.
  • Psychomotor vigilance task (PVT): A test measuring sustained attention and reaction time, used to assess cognitive performance.

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