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Circadian Rhythm Disruption in the Critically Ill: An Opportunity for Improving Outcomes.

Critical care medicine
January 1, 2016
Mark A Oldham et al. (3 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to review the effects of circadian-rhythm-restoring interventions, including melatonin, on medical outcomes in critically ill patients.

Results Summary

The study found that melatonin agonists improved rates of delirium, enhanced sleep, and reduced arrhythmia prevalence in critically ill patients. Observational and intervention studies suggested that circadian-rhythm-restoring factors, including melatonin, supported recovery.

Population

Critically ill patients with disrupted circadian rhythms.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (7)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
physiologic light-dark patterns
increase
recovery from critical illness
critically ill
-
may support recovery
#1
early morning bright light
decrease
delirium
-
-
improved rates
#2
early morning bright light
increase
sleep
-
-
enhanced
#3
early morning bright light
decrease
arrhythmia prevalence
-
-
lower
#4
evening melatonin agonists
decrease
delirium
-
-
improved rates
#5
evening melatonin agonists
increase
sleep
-
-
enhanced
#6
evening melatonin agonists
decrease
arrhythmia prevalence
-
-
lower
#7
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Circadian rhythms are severely disrupted among the critically ill. These circadian arrhythmias impair mentation, immunity, autonomic function, endocrine activity, hormonal signaling, and ultimately healing. In this review, we present a modern model of circadian disruption among the critically ill, discuss causes of these circadian arrhythmias, review observational and intervention studies of the effects of circadian-rhythm-restoring factors on medical outcomes, and identify needed key trials of circadian interventions in the critically ill. DATA SOURCES: MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsychINFO, Google Scholar through December 2014. STUDY SELECTION: Articles relevant to circadian rhythms, melatonin, and light in the critically ill were selected. DATA EXTRACTION AND DATA SYNTHESIS: Articles were synthesized for this review of circadian arrhythmia and the use of circadian-rhythm-restoring interventions among the critically ill. CONCLUSIONS: Circadian disruption often demonstrates serial degradation: initially, the amplitude attenuates along with delayed circadian phase. With increasing acuity of illness, circadian rhythmicity may be lost entirely. Causes of chronodisruption may be environmental or internal to the patient. In particular, inadequate daytime illumination and nocturnal light pollution disrupt healthy circadian periodicity. Internal causes of circadian arrhythmia include critical illness itself and subjective experience of distress and pain. Observational studies of windowed rooms and real-time ambient lighting have found that physiologic light-dark patterns may support recovery from critical illness. Studies of early morning bright light or evening melatonin agonists have found improved rates of delirium, enhanced sleep, and lower arrhythmia prevalence. The current evidence base emphasizes that lighting and melatoninergic interventions deserve to be tested in full-scale trials.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Chronobiology DisordersCritical CareCritical IllnessHumansIntensive Care UnitsQuality ImprovementTreatment Outcome
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations78
Citations/Year8.7
Relative Citation Ratio3.38
NIH Percentile87.3%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score2.05
Normalized Score0.66
Related Supplements
Circadian Rhythm Disruption in the Critically Ill: An Opport... | Panacea Index