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Dawn simulation light: a potential cardiac events protector
Affiliation:1. Centre for Chronobiology, Psychiatric Hospital of the University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland;2. Cyclotron Research Centre, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium;3. IT VitaLight I&D PC Drachten, Philips Consumer Lifestyle, Drachten, The Netherlands;4. Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences, Division of Medicine and Pathophysiology, L. Sacco Hospital, University of Milan, Milan, Italy
Abstract:Objective/BackgroundMajor cardiovascular events frequently increase in the morning due to abrupt changes in the sympatho-vagal cardiac control during the transition from sleep to wakefulness. These neural changes are translated into stepwise increases in cardiac functions, resulting in a potential cardiovascular stress. Here, we explored whether light can “optimize” heart rate and its neural control, by actively promoting a less steep transition from sleep to wakefulness, thus minimizing morning cardiovascular vulnerability.MethodsSeventeen healthy young men were awakened 2-hours before their habitual wake-time. In a counterbalanced within-subject design, we applied a control condition (darkness during sleep and dim light during wakefulness) or dawn-simulation-light (DSL) starting 30-minutes before and ending 30-minutes after scheduled wake-up time.ResultsOur data reveal a significantly gradient reduction in heart rate during the transition from sleep to wakefulness, when applying DSL as compared to a control condition. Likewise, cardiac sympatho-vagal control smoothly increased throughout the 30-min sleep episode preceding scheduled wake-up under DSL and remained stable for the first 30-min of wakefulness. Interestingly, these effects were mostly driven by changes in the parasympathetic cardiac control.ConclusionsOur data demonstrate for the first time that a non-invasive strategy, as light exposure surrounding the wake-up process, can significantly reduce the deleterious sleep-to-wake evoked cardiac modulation in healthy young men awakened under conditions of increased sleep pressure. A translational approach of this light exposure, which closely resembles natural lighting conditions in the morning, may therefore act as a potential protector for cardiac vulnerability in the critical morning hours.
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