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      The Adverse Health Effects of Shift Work in Relation to Risk of Illness/Disease: A Review

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          Summary

          Biological rhythm of sleeping is a natural disparity in an organism corresponding to and in reply to cyclic environmental changes, such as daylight hours and hours of darkness or elevated and low down flow. There is some evidence, based upon epidemiological studies as well as studies upon smaller groups of subjects, that individuals who work during the night and sleep during the daytime show cognitive impairment at work, have poorer and fragmented daytime sleep, and have increased risks of developing a wide range of social, psychological, physiological and medical impairments and disorders. Circadian rhythms are one of the most important effective factors on the physiological and physical performances of humans and disturbing this normal rhythm leads to different groups of diseases. The majority of investigations in biological rhythm demeanor vary noticeably in regards to the exact type of disease, population and protocols of sampling over the other outcomes or issues. We conducted a systematic review of [Science Direct, Pubmed, Scopus] to identify influence of different kinds of diseases among shift workers in response to abnormal rhythm of sleeping. The results of this review indicate that abnormal patterns of sleeping can lead to immunological issues, hypertension, metabolic syndrome, insomnia, cardiovascular disease, obesity and depression. It is vital for subsequent investigations to find a way to reduce negative effects (such as decreased amount of works’ time and altered diet) without side effects to help them.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Acta Medica Bulgarica
          Walter de Gruyter GmbH
          0324-1750
          May 1 2015
          May 1 2015
          : 42
          : 1
          : 63-72
          Article
          10.1515/amb-2015-0009
          130d77d3-e01a-424c-a332-19f5089ddff9
          © 2015

          http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/

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