Abstract

We read with interest the article by Desmet and colleagues entitled "Time-Restricted Feeding in Mice Prevents the Disruption of the Peripheral Circadian Clocks and Its Metabolic Impact during Chronic Jetlag" [...].

Highlights

  • Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations

  • We read with interest the article by Desmet and colleagues entitled “Time-Restricted Feeding in Mice Prevents the Disruption of the Peripheral Circadian Clocks and Its Metabolic Impact during Chronic Jetlag” [1]

  • Since chronodisruption (CD) itself is not explicitly referenced, may we complement their work with publications in which the concept was first proposed in 2003 [3] and systematically developed thereafter?

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. A key focus is “chronodisruption”—used some 18 times as “a disruption of the circadian system”—and the authors refer to “chronodisruptors”, for which they include a reference [2]. Since chronodisruption (CD) itself is not explicitly referenced, may we complement their work with publications in which the concept was first proposed in 2003 [3] and systematically developed thereafter?

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