Colin Howard
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Greetings,
I find at the Autumn change, staying up the extra hour enables me to adjust
relatively without problems.
When I went to the States, in particular visiting Washington DC in 2000, I
did find problems but on trips to New York, this proved to be less
apparrent.
Please, let's hear from others how they cope with these matters.
First, you need to understand the intricate changes happening in your body
when the clocks go back an hour.
Our bodies will begin the daily chore of secreting melatonin, a key hormone
for the timing of sleep. This will accumulate in the blood stream and a few
hours later it will reach its peak concentration before declining steadily
until morning.
Melatonin does not make most of us sleep, and certainly doesn't keep up
asleep. It is more like a reminder, signalling that sleep should not be far
away. Even brief periods of normal electric light delay or even stop this
sleep signal, depending on its brightness and wavelength or colour.
In the evening as melatonin rises, the heat generated by our internal organs
increases to its highest level of the day, followed by a drop - which is
another sleep signal. This is why having a hot bath before bedtime can help
us to sleep.
The body's core temperature continues to drop for the first couple of hours
of sleep, which is mostly slow wave sleep. This is when more of the neurons
in the brain are firing simultaneously, and when our heartrate slows. It
becomes more regular as we have this first episode of deep sleep. Our
coldest core body temperature more or less coincides with the highest level
of melatonin, showing the synchrony of these two circadian timing signals.
A minute before the clocks go back our body's timing systems and the clocks
will probably be aligned. Our internal core will be approaching its coldest
temperature. As the body heats again, and the melatonin signal decreases,
another circadian process begins - the slow sustained release of cortisol
which will culminate on waking.
If melatonin is a sleep signal, then cortisol is a signal to wake. Unless we
are very stressed during the daytime or drink a great deal of caffeine, it
will be at its strongest at the time we typically wake. This is why waking
up can sometimes seem both energising and stressful, and, why sleep is more
difficult when we are stressed
These three critical bodily timing systems, melatonin, core body temperature
and cortisol, are synchronised by a central clock in the suprachiasmatic
nucleus of the brain, which co-ordinates the time of the clocks in each cell
of the body. The pattern of each signal repeats about every 24 hours, but
can be disrupted by different aspects of our environment such as light,
vigorous exercise and stress.
These cycles are not fixed at exactly 24 hours. They can be a few minutes
shorter or longer than 24 hours. This enables our sleep-wake regimen to
gradually change with the seasons.
But the change is slow. Abrupt changes, flying east or west (which extends
or shortens sunlight exposure, affecting melatonin), heat waves, cold snaps
(raising or lowering core body temperature) or stress (which increases
daytime cortisol) cause disruption in this regimen. We just haven't evolved
to cope with sudden changes.
It will take days for the biological and actual clock to realign. Just as
flying from London to New York takes more adjustment time than New York to
London, the springtime change often feels gentler, because it seems to be
easier to move your clock forward than backwards.
We are likely to lose out on sleep in the morning, particularly REM sleep,
which kicks in later and is involved in emotion regulation. Our biological
clock will still begin the cortisol-induced daily waking process at the same
time it did the day before. But you will be awake as it peaks, which may
result in deflated mood.
This disruption is not the same for all of us. About one in a 100 of the
general population have a genetic disorder called delayed phase sleep
syndrome, which makes it impossible to sleep until the early hours of the
morning. Their melatonin levels increase much later than in other people,
which means they will probably benefit from the clocks going back, if only
for a short while.
Similarly, about ten to 20 in 100 late-adolescent children - compared to
adults - are biologically driven to initiate sleep later. And for them,
temporarily, their sleep may align more closely with the rest of the
household. But they too will be sleepier in the morning.
Another group in the population, about 1% of those in middle age, feel they
need to go to bed far earlier than most, usually in the early evening, and
wake very early in the morning. It isn't clear why advanced-phase sleep
syndrome is more frequent in this age group, although the circadian system
seems to weaken as we age. This group is more compromised by clocks being
put back.
The autumn clock change is also often difficult for menopausal women who
experience hot flushes - their body clock appears to be advanced and tend to
need to sleep earlier. Clocks going backwards mean they will need to wait
longer for sleep than they might wish and wake earlier.
The daylight saving disruption rarely lasts more than a week. But one is
left asking why we put our bodily clocks under this abrupt strain. We
challenge the synchrony of our bodily clocks, for the sake of fleeting
moments of additional light.
John Groeger is Professor of Psychology in School of Social Sciences at
Nottingham Trent University.
This article was originally published by The Conversation.
RTÉ Lifestyle.
Colin Howard, Southern England.