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Shift
Work Link to Heart Disease
A study in Antarctica has supported
theories that night shift workers are at increased risk of developing
heart disease.
Previous laboratory studies
have led to similar conclusions, but this is the first time the
link has been shown under real conditions, say researchers from
the University of Surrey in Guildford.
The team says their findings could have major significance, as
an estimated 20% of the UK workforce, around six million people,
does shift work.
Shift work has been found to
disrupt circadian rhythms, the daily cycle.
Previous studies have looked
at how the stress of night shifts could be linked to increased
heart disease risk.
This research examined how
the body reacts after a meal, depending on what time of the day
it is eaten.
Post-meal checks
Researchers looked at 12 healthy
night shift workers aged 24 to 34 years at the British Antarctic
Survey station at Halley Bay in Antarctica.
Their hormonal and metabolic
responses to meals were measured during daytime on a normal working
day, during night time at the beginning of a period of night shift
work and during the daytime on return from night working to daytime
working.
The workers did a week of normal
0900 to 1700 shifts before changing to a week of midnight to 0800
shifts with no time to adapt, then back again after another seven
days.
Blood and urine checks were
also carried out.
It was found that after a meal,
night shift workers' blood levels of glucose, insulin and triacylglycerol
(TAG), a fat which stores energy, were significantly higher than
in normal daytime hours.
Fat deposits
Levels of glucose and insulin
returned to pre-shift levels two days after returning to daytime
working, but TAG levels were still found to be raised.
When TAG levels are high, it
is easier for fat deposits to form on the inside of arteries,
leading to vascular disease.
Dr Linda Morgan, a reader in
nutritional endocrinology who worked on the study, told BBC News
Online: "This has a couple of implications.
"If you're working a rotational
shift system, your body clock is probably not adjusting at all."
She said it was also important
for night shift workers to eat healthily - something shift workers
often do not do.
Reference
Source 108
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