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DOI: 10.5935/1984-0063.20200043
Daytime variation in aortic valve surgery: would the chronotype change the end of the story?
Chronobiology has been recently integrated on several medical fields. Circadian physiology, in particular, was shown to affect several physiological, physiopathological, and pharmacological aspects, which ultimately impact clinical outcomes on different domains. This was brought to attention by Gotte et al.[1], in their interesting and recently published article on the diurnal oscillation of aortic valve surgery and respective clinical outcomes. Despite the relevance which general features of the human circadian timing system have on guiding biological course of events on either medicine or surgery, it is well known the complex cross-talk between the central master clock, the peripheral oscillators, and the personal time signature that dictates the individual chronotype[2]. Indeed, chronotype, the behavioral manifest of a personalized internal time should be taken into consideration when trying to confirm such challenging hypothesis as that of the influence of external time cues on clinical and surgical outcomes[3].
In a recent clinical study testing whether time of the day and chronotype could impact the relationship between heart rate variability in sports performance, Vitale et al.[4] showed that autonomic modulation depends not only on the time of the day but also from different chronotypes (with evening people having greater levels of autonomic disturbance compared with morning type persons). Facer-Childs et al.[5] also demonstrated diurnal variations in vascular endothelial vasodilation, which were influenced by this individually based temporal domain. Interestingly, some kind of damage on myocardial tissue was suggested to have a circadian fluctuation on its propensity[6] but also to be function of the chronotype itself[7]. Hence, it seems that not only the biological mechanisms ticked by the circadian clock may interfere and clinically impact the surgical physiology but also the genetically based response through internal time modulated behaviors may probably affect those derived outcomes. So, an important question can be raised: “Could the chronotype assessment, as well as its clinical integration be able to change the end of the story?”
Conflict of Interests
The authors have no conflict of interests to declare.
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REFERENCES
- 1 Gotte J, Zittermann A, Deutsch MA, Schramm R, Bleiziffer S, Hata M, et al. Daytime variation in aortic valve surgery and clinical outcome: a propensity score-matched analysis. Ann Thorac Surg. 2020 Aug;110(2):558-66.
- 2 Takahashi M, Tahara Y, Tsubosaka M, Fukazawa M, Ozaki M, Iwakami T, et al. Chronotype and social jetlag influence human circadian clock gene expression. Sci Rep. 2018;8(1):10152.
- 3 Partonen T. Chronotype and health outcomes. Curr Sleep Medicine Rep. 2015;1:205-11.
- 4 Vitale JA, Bonato M, La Torre A, Banfi G. Heart rate variability in sport performance: do time of day and chronotype play a role?. J Clin Med. 2019 May;8(5):723.
- 5 Facer-Childs ER, Pake K, Lee VY, Lucas SJE, Balanos GM. Diurnal variations in vascular endothelial vasodilation are influenced by chronotype in healthy humans. Front Physiol. 2019;10:901.
- 6 Montaigne D, Marechal X, Modine T, Coisne A, Mouton S, Fayad G, et al. Daytime variation of perioperative myocardial injury in cardiac surgery and its prevention by Rev-Erbα antagonism: a single-centre propensitymatched cohort study and a randomised study. Lancet. 2017 Oct;391(10115):59-69.
- 7 Selvi Y, Smolensky MH, Boysan M, Aydin A, Besiroglu L, Atli A, et al. Role of patient chronotype on circadian pattern of myocardial infarction: a pilot study. Chronobiol Int. 2011;28(4):371-7.
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Publication History
Received: 26 May 2020
Accepted: 10 August 2020
Article published online:
30 November 2023
© 2023. Brazilian Sleep Association. This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonDerivative-NonCommercial License, permitting copying and reproduction so long as the original work is given appropriate credit. Contents may not be used for commercial purposes, or adapted, remixed, transformed or built upon. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)
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REFERENCES
- 1 Gotte J, Zittermann A, Deutsch MA, Schramm R, Bleiziffer S, Hata M, et al. Daytime variation in aortic valve surgery and clinical outcome: a propensity score-matched analysis. Ann Thorac Surg. 2020 Aug;110(2):558-66.
- 2 Takahashi M, Tahara Y, Tsubosaka M, Fukazawa M, Ozaki M, Iwakami T, et al. Chronotype and social jetlag influence human circadian clock gene expression. Sci Rep. 2018;8(1):10152.
- 3 Partonen T. Chronotype and health outcomes. Curr Sleep Medicine Rep. 2015;1:205-11.
- 4 Vitale JA, Bonato M, La Torre A, Banfi G. Heart rate variability in sport performance: do time of day and chronotype play a role?. J Clin Med. 2019 May;8(5):723.
- 5 Facer-Childs ER, Pake K, Lee VY, Lucas SJE, Balanos GM. Diurnal variations in vascular endothelial vasodilation are influenced by chronotype in healthy humans. Front Physiol. 2019;10:901.
- 6 Montaigne D, Marechal X, Modine T, Coisne A, Mouton S, Fayad G, et al. Daytime variation of perioperative myocardial injury in cardiac surgery and its prevention by Rev-Erbα antagonism: a single-centre propensitymatched cohort study and a randomised study. Lancet. 2017 Oct;391(10115):59-69.
- 7 Selvi Y, Smolensky MH, Boysan M, Aydin A, Besiroglu L, Atli A, et al. Role of patient chronotype on circadian pattern of myocardial infarction: a pilot study. Chronobiol Int. 2011;28(4):371-7.