Abstract

The Metabolic Syndrome is a cluster of cardio‐metabolic risk factors and comorbidities conveying high risk of both cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes. It is responsible for huge socio‐economic costs with its resulting morbidity and mortality in most countries. The underlying aetiology of this clustering has been the subject of much debate. More recently, significant interest has focussed on the involvement of the circadian system, a major regulator of almost every aspect of human health and metabolism. The Circadian Syndrome has now been implicated in several chronic diseases including type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. There is now increasing evidence connecting disturbances in circadian rhythm with not only the key components of the Metabolic Syndrome but also its main comorbidities including sleep disturbances, depression, steatohepatitis and cognitive dysfunction. Based on this, we now propose that circadian disruption may be an important underlying aetiological factor for the Metabolic Syndrome and we suggest that it be renamed the ‘Circadian Syndrome’. With the increased recognition of the ‘Circadian Syndrome’, circadian medicine, through the timing of exercise, light exposure, food consumption, dispensing of medications and sleep, is likely to play a much greater role in the maintenance of both individual and population health in the future.

Highlights

  • The circadian clock and metabolic derangementThe circadian system is the major regulator of almost every aspect of human health and metabolism

  • The human brain has a master ‘Body Clock’ which resides in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of the hypothalamus and it determines our daily rhythms, a phenomenon widely described in nature in almost all living organisms [1,2]

  • The accumulating evidence linking circadian rhythm disruption to lifestyle changes in our society calls for a greater emphasis on this relationship in noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) prevention

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Summary

Introduction

The circadian clock and metabolic derangementThe circadian system is the major regulator of almost every aspect of human health and metabolism. In the light of this, it has been suggested that the resulting circadian rhythm disturbances may be a major contributor to the contemporary global epidemics of T2DM, CVD and obesity [3,5–7,11,15–,19]. Metabolic syndrome components and circadian disruption The Metabolic Syndrome, the cluster of cardiometabolic risk factors and comorbidities, is responsible for large health and socio-economic costs in most nations mainly for the resulting morbidity and mortality from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) including obesity, T2DM, CVD, cancer and mood disorders [8].

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