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The Health Risks Of Shift Work
Shift workers and people with more conventionally sleep-deprived
lifestyles -- are known to be at higher risk for accidents, sleep
disorders and psychological stress due to daytime demands, such
as family and other obligations, that interfere with sleeping. Now
scientific evidence suggests their disrupted circadian rhythms may
also cause a kind of biological revolt, raising their likelihood
of obesity, cancer, reproductive health problems, mental illness
and gastrointestinal disorders.
The evidence for an increased cancer risk is so compelling that,
in December, the International
Agency for Research on Cancer, a unit of the World Health Organization,
declared that shift work is "probably carcinogenic to humans."
Researchers are beginning to understand why. Among the most significant
-- and startling -- reasons: As much as 15% of human genes function
on a schedule, with highly regulated, oscillating patterns of activity.
These clocklike genes are common features of most cells and can
be found in every major organ in the body. They, in turn, affect
the schedule of scores of biological functions, from metabolism
to cell division to cognitive processes.
"Less than 10 years ago, it was thought that sleep was for the brain
and not for the rest of the body, so lack of sleep would make you
tired, moody and more likely to have accidents," says sleep researcher
Eve Van Cauter, a professor of medicine at the University of Chicago.
"But sleep deprivation may be bad for the body too, representing
a risk for a variety of abnormal conditions."
Evolution supports that theory. Life on Earth began with single-cell
organisms that depended on sunlight for converting energy to food.
"Life has been adapting to a light-dark cycle since the beginning
of the planet," says Paolo Sassone-Corsi, chairman of the department
of pharmacology at UC Irvine.
But modern humans wrongly think they can override their natural
sleep patterns with impunity, says Dr. Charles Czeisler, director
of the division of sleep medicine at Harvard Medical School. "It's
a myth that we alone, among all animals, have the power to sleep
when we want," he says.
Disrupted rhythms
Dennis Corrigan sometimes questions his decision to switch to a
night shift 12 years ago.
By working nights, the UPS truck driver from West Covina, age 52,
avoids the physical demands of the day shift, when lifting boxes
is part of the job, plus the worst of L.A. traffic. The 10:45 p.m.-to-11
a.m. shift also allowed him to attend all of his son's high-school
football games.
But Corrigan now sleeps only about six hours a day. He has put on
weight and gets less exercise than before the switch and was diagnosed
with diabetes five years ago.
"The rough part is, when I come home, I'm hungry," he says. "I eat
a heavy meal before going off to bed. You're not supposed to do
that. It's a worry."
His circadian rhythms may be to blame. Those rhythms determine when
certain body processes take place. For example, melatonin, the hormone
that aids sleep, is released at night; the hormone cortisol is low
at night and pours out in the morning, jump-starting the body's
daytime functions. But in night workers, melatonin continues to
peak at night -- even though they're awake -- and cortisol levels
continue to peak in the early morning hours, even when night-shift
workers are eager to get some sleep.
Those disrupted circadian rhythms are why night-shift workers sleep
less and with poorer quality, Van Cauter says: They try to sleep
when their bodies want to be awake.
Chronic sleep deprivation may carry some of the same risks as disrupted
circadian rhythms, she says. Today, Americans average about one
hour less of sleep per night than they did 30 years ago.
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