Abstract

BACKGROUNDThe circadian system entrains behavioral and physiological rhythms to environmental cycles, and modern lifestyles disrupt this entrainment. We investigated a timed exercise intervention to phase shift the internal circadian rhythm.METHODSIn 52 young, sedentary adults, dim light melatonin onset (DLMO) was measured before and after 5 days of morning (10 hours after DLMO; n = 26) or evening (20 hours after DLMO; n = 26) exercise. Phase shifts were calculated as the difference in DLMO before and after exercise.RESULTSMorning exercise induced phase advance shifts (0.62 ± 0.18 hours) that were significantly greater than phase shifts from evening exercise (-0.02 ± 0.18 hours; P = 0.01). Chronotype also influenced the effect of timed exercise. For later chronotypes, both morning and evening exercise induced phase advances (0.54 ± 0.29 hours and 0.46 ±0.25 hours, respectively). In contrast, earlier chronotypes had phase advances from morning exercise (0.49 ± 0.25 hours) but had phase delays from evening exercise (-0.41 ± 0.29 hours).CONCLUSIONLate chronotypes - those who experience the most severe circadian misalignment - may benefit from phase advances induced by exercise in the morning or evening, but evening exercise may exacerbate circadian misalignment in early chronotypes. Thus, personalized exercise timing prescription, based on chronotype, could alleviate circadian misalignment in young adults.TRIAL REGISTRATIONTrial registration can be found at www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT04097886).FUNDINGFunding was supplied by NIH grants UL1TR001998 and TL1TR001997, the Barnstable Brown Diabetes and Obesity Center, the Pediatric Exercise Physiology Laboratory Endowment, the Arvle and Ellen Turner Thacker Research Fund, and the University of Kentucky.

Highlights

  • The circadian system controls 24-hour cycles of behavior and physiology, such as rest-activity and feeding rhythms, and has evolved to entrain to natural cycles of light and dark [1]

  • Late chronotypes — those who experience the most severe circadian misalignment — may benefit from phase advances induced by exercise in the morning or evening, but evening exercise may exacerbate circadian misalignment in early chronotypes

  • Young adults tend to have later sleep timing [37], and they could have the greatest benefit from timed exercise, if that exercise advanced their circadian rhythms

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Summary

Introduction

The circadian system controls 24-hour cycles of behavior and physiology, such as rest-activity and feeding rhythms, and has evolved to entrain to natural cycles of light and dark [1]. This synchronization between internal and external rhythms has been shown to improve fitness in model organisms [2,3,4]. People are active and have light exposure long after sunset, they eat late into the night, and they wake up to alarm clocks hours before they would wake naturally [5, 6] This has resulted in a society that is living in a chronic state of circadian disruption. We investigated a timed exercise intervention to phase shift the internal circadian rhythm

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