Factors related with the ability to maintain wakefulness in the daytime after fast and forward rotating shifts

Nov 5, 2013The Kaohsiung journal of medical sciences

Factors linked to staying awake during the day after fast and forward rotating work shifts

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Abstract

levels were significantly elevated during a daytime sleep restriction period following rotating shift work.

  • There was no change in sleep propensity, despite increased self-reported sleepiness.
  • Anxiety and neuropsychological performance in tasks related to executive function, attention, and motor abilities remained stable during the daytime sleep restriction.
  • Younger age was associated with longer mean sleep latency in the .
  • Higher thyrotropin levels and lower anxiety scores were linked to longer mean sleep latency in the Maintenance of Wakefulness Test.
  • Omissions in tasks showed a practice effect, indicating improved performance with repeated testing.

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Key numbers

6.6 ± 1.1 hours
Mean Total Sleep Time
Self-reported total sleep time during study night shifts
βˆ’2.545
Age Impact on Sleep Latency
Beta coefficient from GEE regression for latency
4.259
Elevated Association
Beta coefficient from GEE regression for latency

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