Insights about Travel-Related Sleep Disruption from 1.5 Million Nights of Data.

IF 5.6 2区 医学 Q1 Medicine
Sleep Pub Date : 2025-03-24 DOI:10.1093/sleep/zsaf077
Adrian R Willoughby, Raphael Vallat, Ju Lynn Ong, Michael W L Chee
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Study objectives: Growing adoption of reliable wearable sleep trackers has made it possible to analyze multi-night, objective sleep data from travelers on a scale hitherto not possible. This study was designed to complement previous studies of jet lag and circadian realignment conducted under highly controlled laboratory conditions and small-scale field studies typically involving specialist samples such as professional athletes.

Methods: De-identified sleep data from 15 days before and after 64,847 trips from 57,240 Oura Ring users were analyzed. Trips were at least 1000km and originated from North America and Europe. We characterized the evolution of sleep timing, duration and macro-architecture, considering the influence of number of time zones crossed, direction of travel, and habitual sleep patterns.

Results: Sleep disruption began with curtailed sleep on the night before travel because of early awakening. Sleep duration was shorter during and immediately following travel but returned to within ~12 minutes of baseline after ~2 days. In contrast, changes in sleep timing and sleep architecture were considerably slower to recover, with sleep timing not returning to baseline after 15 days. Sleep disruption was more severe with eastward travel and across more time zones. Inter-individual differences in both sleep duration and timing equilibrated with travel.

Conclusions: Both structural and intrinsic circadian factors influence sleep during travel. Sleep homeostatic mechanisms drive recovery of sleep duration quickly although architecture is still compromised. Realignment of sleep timing to the new time zone takes significantly longer.

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来源期刊
Sleep
Sleep Medicine-Neurology (clinical)
CiteScore
8.70
自引率
10.70%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: SLEEP® publishes findings from studies conducted at any level of analysis, including: Genes Molecules Cells Physiology Neural systems and circuits Behavior and cognition Self-report SLEEP® publishes articles that use a wide variety of scientific approaches and address a broad range of topics. These may include, but are not limited to: Basic and neuroscience studies of sleep and circadian mechanisms In vitro and animal models of sleep, circadian rhythms, and human disorders Pre-clinical human investigations, including the measurement and manipulation of sleep and circadian rhythms Studies in clinical or population samples. These may address factors influencing sleep and circadian rhythms (e.g., development and aging, and social and environmental influences) and relationships between sleep, circadian rhythms, health, and disease Clinical trials, epidemiology studies, implementation, and dissemination research.
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