PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Shift-work causes negative impacts on health, affects men and women differently

Shift-work and irregular work schedules can cause several health-related issues and affect our defence against infection, according to new research from the University of Waterloo.

2021-04-21
(Press-News.org) Shift-work and irregular work schedules can cause several health-related issues and affect our defence against infection, according to new research from the University of Waterloo.

These health-related issues occur because the body's natural clock, called the circadian clock, can be disrupted by inconsistent changes in the sleep-wake schedule and feeding patterns often caused by shift work. To study this, researchers at Waterloo developed a mathematical model to look at how a disruption in the circadian clock affects the immune system in fighting off illness.

"Because our immune system is affected by the circadian clock, our ability to mount an immune response changes during the day," said Anita Layton, professor of Applied Mathematics, Computer Science, Pharmacy and Biology at Waterloo. "How likely are you to fight off an infection that occurs in the morning than midday? The answer depends on whether you are a man or a woman, and whether you are among quarter of the modern-day labour force that has an irregular work schedule."

The researchers created new computational models, separately for men and women, which simulate the interplay between the circadian clock and the immune system. The model is composed of the core clock genes, their related proteins, and the regulatory mechanism of pro- and anti-inflammatory mediators. By adjusting the clock, the models can simulate male and female shift-workers. 

The results of these computer simulations conclude that the immune response varies with the time of infection. Model simulation suggests that the time before we go to bed is the "worst" time to get an infection. That is the period of the day when our body is least prepared to produce the pro- and anti-inflammatory mediators needed during an infection. Just as importantly, an individual's sex impacts the severity of the infection.

"Shift work likely affects men and women differently," said Stéphanie Abo, a PhD candidate in Waterloo's Department of Applied Mathematics. "Compared to females, the immune system in males is more prone to overactivation, which can increase their chances of sepsis following an ill-timed infection."

INFORMATION:

The study, Modeling the circadian regulation of the immune system: sexually dimorphic effects of shift work, authored by Waterloo's Faculty of Mathematics' Layton and Abo, was recently published in the journal PLoS Computational Biology.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Carleton's Dominque Roche investigates why researchers are wary of sharing data

2021-04-21
Carleton University's Marie Curie Global Fellow Dominique Roche has co-authored a paper on the barriers researchers face to publicly sharing their data, an issue that has gained prominence during the COVID-19 pandemic. The article, Reported Individual Costs and Benefits of Sharing Open Data among Canadian Academic Faculty in Ecology and Evolution, was published in the journal BioScience. "The COVID-19 pandemic has made people from all over the world grasp the importance of sharing research data to speed up scientific discoveries," said Roche. "Clearly, open data have been key in fighting the pandemic, but they're also really important to tackle other urgent problems, like climate change and biodiversity loss." Roche and co-author Sandrine ...

Environmental DNA and RNA may be key in monitoring pathogens such as SARS-CoV-2

2021-04-21
Real-world disease and parasite monitoring is often hampered by the inability of traditional approaches to easily sample broad geographical areas and large numbers of individuals. This can result in patchy data that fall short of what researchers need to anticipate and address outbreaks. Writing in BioScience, Jessica Farrell (University of Florida), Liam Whitmore (University of Limerick), and David Duffy (University of Florida) describe the promise of novel molecular techniques to overcome these shortcomings. By sampling environmental DNA and RNA (eDNA and eRNA), the authors say, researchers will be better able to ...

Simple treatment during pregnancy can protect baby from memory problems in later life

2021-04-21
A new study in laboratory rats has discovered a direct link between low oxygen in the womb and impaired memory function in the adult offspring. It also finds that anti-oxidant supplements during pregnancy may protect against this. Low oxygen in the womb - known as chronic fetal hypoxia - is one of the most common complications in human pregnancy. It can be diagnosed when a routine ultrasound scan shows that the baby is not growing properly and is caused by a number of conditions including pre-eclampsia, infection of the placenta, gestational diabetes or maternal obesity. The new results show that chronic fetal hypoxia leads to a reduced density of blood vessels, and a reduced number of nerve cells and their connections in parts of the ...

Handwashing responsible for bacteria in sinks, largest non-hospital study shows

2021-04-21
Handwashing is shaping communities of bacteria that live and grow in the plumbing of domestic sinks, scientists have found. In the largest study of sink bacteria conducted outside of hospitals, scientists at the University of Reading discovered communities of similar bacteria that largely remain down our drains after hand washing. The researchers found that there are significant differences between families of dominant bacteria depending on the location in the sink drains, and that plumbing systems such as P-trap or U-bend provides ideal environments for bacteria to grow. Dr Hyun Soon Gweon, Lecturer in Bioinformatics for Genomics at the University of Reading, said: "The mantra to 'wash your hands' to fight coronavirus transmission has highlighted the importance of ...

Simple oral hygiene could help reduce COVID-19 severity - study

2021-04-21
COVID-19 could pass into people's lungs from saliva with the virus moving directly from mouth to bloodstream - particularly if individuals are suffering from gum disease, according to new research. Evidence shows that blood vessels of the lungs, rather than airways, are affected initially in COVID-19 lung disease with high concentrations of the virus in saliva and periodontitis associated with increased risk of death. The researchers propose that dental plaque accumulation and periodontal inflammation further intensify the likelihood of the SARS-CoV-2 virus reaching the lungs and causing more severe cases of the infection. Experts say this discovery could make effective oral healthcare ...

Medical and ethical experts say 'make general anaesthesia more widely available for dying patients'

2021-04-21
General anaesthesia is widely used for surgery and diagnostic interventions, to ensure the patient is completely unconscious during these procedures. However, in a paper published in Anaesthesia (a journal of the Association of Anaesthetists) ethics and anaesthesia experts from the University of Oxford say that general anaesthesia should be more widely available for patients at the end of their lives. Painkilling medications (analgesia) are commonly given to dying patients. But they may not be enough, leading to the use of continuous deep sedation (also known as "palliative" or "terminal" sedation). "However, for some patients these common interventions are not enough. Other patients may express a clear desire to be completely unconscious as they die," explains ...

Study finds dramatic gains in life expectancy for people with HIV in Latin America

Study finds dramatic gains in life expectancy for people with HIV in Latin America
2021-04-21
In 2003 in Haiti, a 20-year-old in treatment for HIV could have expected to live to 34. But as of 2017, life expectancy for a 20-year-old in treatment for HIV in Haiti is now 61, compared to 70 for Haiti's general population. A research team from Vanderbilt University Medical Center and institutions across Latin America today reports what looks to be far the largest study to date of life expectancy for people living with HIV infection in low-income or middle-income countries. With a focus on 30,688 people treated for HIV between 2003 and 2017 in seven Latin American countries, the study, published ...

Significant life expectancy increase for adults living with HIV on ART in Latin America

2021-04-21
Study of 30,000 adults living with HIV receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART) in Latin America and the Caribbean finds life expectancy has increased to within 10 years of the general population in these countries over the last two decades. Disparities in life expectancy due to demographic and clinical factors at the point participants began ART (including sexual HIV transmission risk, low CD4 cell count, and history of tuberculosis) highlight an ongoing need to reach vulnerable populations in the region. Life expectancy among adults living with HIV receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART) ...

Drug development platform could provide flexible, rapid and targeted antimicrobials

Drug development platform could provide flexible, rapid and targeted antimicrobials
2021-04-21
When disease outbreaks happen, response time in developing and distributing treatments is crucial to saving lives. Unfortunately, developing custom drugs as countermeasures is often a slow and difficult process. But researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder have created a platform that can develop effective and highly specific peptide nucleic acid therapies for use against any bacteria within just one week. The work is detailed in Nature Communications Biology and could change the way we respond to pandemics and how we approach increasing cases of antibiotic resistance globally. The Facile Accelerated Specific Therapeutic (FAST) platform was created by Associate Professor Anushree Chatterjee ...

The COVID-19 is a unique opportunity to move towards more sustainable and equitable society

The COVID-19 is a unique opportunity to move towards more sustainable and equitable society
2021-04-20
Researchers at the University of Jyväskylä highlight how the struggles caused by the COVID-19 pandemic can guide us towards an equitable use of our shared environment and a transition towards sustainability. COVID-19 crisis has emphasized how poorly prepared humanity is to cope with global disasters and to face the new ecological norm under climate change, degraded ecosystems, and biodiversity loss. The final consequences of COVID-19 crisis on sustainability are not yet known. However, this crisis offers a unique opportunity to move towards a greener, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Can bismuth prevent oil leaks – (and save Norwegians billions)?

Atmospheric isotopes reveal 4.5 billion years of volcanism on Jupiter’s moon Io

An ink for 3D-printing flexible devices without mechanical joints

Association for Chemoreception Sciences (AChemS) 46th Annual Meeting

How the Birmingham Drug Discovery Hub created an investment-ready ‘drug library’

Scientists uncover 95 regions of the genome linked to PTSD

AI tool predicts responses to cancer therapy using information from each cell of the tumor

CEOs’ human concern translates into higher stock price

Smoking-related deaths could be reduced if people attending lung cancer screening are offered stop-smoking support

Quick decisions in soccer enhanced by brain’s ability to suppress actions

Recycling CFRP waste is a challenge, but we've found a way to make it work

Advanced nuclear magnetic resonance technique developed to reveal precise structural and dynamical details in zeolites

Advancing performance assessment of a spectral beam splitting hybrid PV/T system with water-based SiO2 nanofluid

Researchers realize target protein stability analysis by time-resolved ultraviolet photodissociation mass spectrometry

Oxygen vacancies mediated ultrathin Bi4O5Br2 nanosheets as efficient piezocatalyst for synthesis of H2O2 from pure water

Warming and exogenous organic matter input affected temperature sensitivity and microbial carbon use efficiency of agricultural soil respiration on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau

Eco-friendly glue designed by Cal Poly, Geisys Ventures team earns industry 'Innovation Award'

From dreams to reality: unveiling the ideal in situ construction method for lunar habitats and paving the way to Moon colonization

From theory to practice: Study demonstrates high CO2 storage efficiency in shale reservoirs using fracturing technology

What women want: Female experiences to manage pelvic pain

Study finds ChatGPT shows promise as medication management tool, could help improve geriatric health care

Heart failure, not stroke is the most common complication of atrial fibrillation

Antipsychotics for dementia linked to more harms than previously acknowledged

Health improvements occurred worldwide since 2010 despite COVID-19 pandemic, but progress was uneven

Mind the gender gap – Met police least trusted by women

Surrey engineers help Mauritius spot illegal fishing from space

Opioid dependence remains high but stable in Scotland, new surveillance report finds

Protecting brain cells with cannabinol

Calorie restriction study reveals complexities in how diet impacts aging

Atom-by-atom: Imaging structural transformations in 2D materials

[Press-News.org] Shift-work causes negative impacts on health, affects men and women differently
Shift-work and irregular work schedules can cause several health-related issues and affect our defence against infection, according to new research from the University of Waterloo.