AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to investigate whether aldosterone secretion has a circadian rhythm independent of the sleep/wake cycle, given that urine output and various hormones display daily variations.
  • Ten healthy participants followed a strict 57.3-hour protocol that included both sleep and wake periods, with blood samples taken every 4 hours to measure aldosterone levels.
  • Results showed a clear circadian rhythm in aldosterone secretion, being higher at the end of the biological night and lower at the end of the biological day, confirming that both circadian rhythm and sleep/wake cycle influence aldosterone levels.

Article Abstract

Objective: A diurnal variation in urine output has been described in humans, whereby it is lowest at night. Fluid balance hormones such as vasopressin and aldosterone as well as urine output have a diurnal variation. Although the diurnal variation of vasopressin results in part from a circadian rhythm, the variation in aldosterone has until recently been reported to be due to the sleep/wake cycle. The present study used a specialized protocol to explore whether aldosterone has an underlying circadian rhythm.

Methods: Ten healthy participants (average age 23.1) were enrolled in the 57.3-hour protocol that included an 8-hour baseline sleep episode, 40 hours in constant routine conditions (wakefulness, food and fluid intake, posture, and dim light), and a 9.3-hour recovery sleep. Blood samples for aldosterone were taken every 4 hours. Cosinor analysis was performed on the constant routine data to test the effect of the sleep/wake cycle on overall aldosterone secretion.

Results: There was a significant circadian rhythm during the 40-hour constant routine, independent of sleep, with aldosterone higher at the end of the biological night and lower at the end of the biological day. When analyzing data from the entire 57.3-hour protocol and controlling for this circadian rhythm, aldosterone concentration was significantly higher during the recovery night following the 40-hour sleep deprivation compared to the night spent awake.

Conclusion: We found a significant endogenous circadian rhythm in the secretion of aldosterone, independent of sleep. In addition, as shown previously, there was a significant effect of the sleep/wake cycle on aldosterone secretion.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11031291PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sleh.2023.10.019DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

circadian rhythm
20
diurnal variation
12
sleep/wake cycle
12
constant routine
12
aldosterone
10
rhythm aldosterone
8
aldosterone secretion
8
urine output
8
573-hour protocol
8
cycle aldosterone
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!