Circadian management
Circadian management includes various ways to optimise one's circadian rhythm with respect to one's sleep schedule. The stability as well as the alignment of your circadian rhythm is critical to maintaining the quality of your sleep. However, depending on the timings of your sleeps and your scheduling restraints, you may or may not be able to sleep at optimal hours. To this end, it is possible to mitigate the effects of suboptimal sleep timings through shifting the circadian rhythm itself.
Circadian structure
The circadian rhythm regulates a range of physiological processes that controls sleep-wake cycles. These rhythms are synchronized to local solar time when they are stabilised.
Note that, in some regions, local clock time can differ substantially from the solar time, and additional consideration is required to correctly plan circadian management measures.
Local Solar Time | Marker | Note |
---|---|---|
21:00-00:00 | SWS peak | |
01:00-03:00 | Lowest alertness | Sleep is most favoured in this time |
04:00-06:00 | Min. body tempeturature | This may or may not be the time with the strongest subjective feeling of coldness |
06:00-09:00 | REM peak | |
09:00-11:00 | Highest alertness | |
11:00-17:00 | Daytime nap zone | This corresponds to the circadian dip in the early afternoon. |
17:00-19:00 | Max. body temperature |
Methods
A variety of methods can be used to optimise one's circadian rhythm. For schedules that are close to optimal ones, relatively little intervention is needed, whereas for drastically shifted schedules, strict observance of below practices wil be required.
Light exposure prior to the temperature nadir results in a delay of circadian rhythms, whereas light exposure after the temperature nadir causes phase advances. Note that there is a dead zone in the middle of the day where bright light exposure has no effect on the timing of circadian rhythms. In contrast, melatonin administered in the beginning of the night advances the circadian rhythm, while melatonin in the morning delays the circadian rhythm.
Dark period
Dark period is a fixed daily period in which little or no melatonin-suppressing light should be allowed to enter the eyes. This is done because melatonin is essential to the stability of one's circadian rhythm. Blue, and to a lesser extent green light greatly suppresses and delays melatonin production. Left uncontrolled, this would significantly destabilise sleep and compromise its quality.
Using red- or orange-coloured laser goggles is the most common way to achieve this. For each schedule type, there is a set of recommended dark period timings, detailed in the napchart in schedule pages. It is also strongly recommended to avoid food intake and exercise in this period to align with the body's tendency to rest at night.
Those doing shifted schedules and those living near the poles may find the need to maintain dark period during daylight hours. This requires additional caution, as daylight is too strong to overcome with goggles alone. It is advised to stay indoors and use blackout curtains for this purpose.
Daylight lamps
Though necessary in appropriate amounts, it is also possible to have too much dark period. This may occur when the local day length is too short (winter), or when the dark period extends too much into the daylight hours on late core schedules.
To avoid circadian instability due to excessive darkness, daylight lamps can be used to artificially simulate daylight, lengthening photoperiod. Daylight lamps are very bright white lamps often used as a treatment for seasonal affective disorder.
Melatonin supplements
Food
Exercise
Examples
Late core
Early core
Night shift
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