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KMID : 1161520020060030239
Animal Cells and Systems
2002 Volume.6 No. 3 p.239 ~ p.245
Circadian rhythms of melatonin, thy raid-stimulating hormone and body temperature: Relationships among those rhythms and effect of sleep-wake cycle
Kim Mi-Seung

Lee Hyun-J.
Im Wook-Bin
Abstract
Plasma melatonin, thyroid?stimulating hormone (TSH) and body temperature were measured simultaneously and continuously before and after the sleep?wake cycle was shifted in 4 healthy males and changes in the circadian rhythm itself and in the phase relationship among these circadian rhythms were determined. Normal sleep?wake cycle (sleep hours: 2300?0700) was delayed by 10 h (sleep hours: 0900?1700) during the experiment. Even after this shift the typical melatonin rhythm was maintained: low during daytime and high during night. The melatonin rhythm was gradually delayed day by day. The TSH rhythm was also maintained fundamentally during 3 consecutive days of altered sleep?wake cycle. The phase was also delayed gradually but remarkably. The daily rhythm of body temperature was changed by the alteration of sleep?wake cycle. The body temperature began to decrease at the similar clock time as in the control but the decline during night awake period was less steep and the lowered body temperature persisted during sleep. The hormonal profiles during the days of shifted sleep?wake cycle suggest that plasma melatonin and TSH rhythms are basically regulated by an endogenous biological clock. The parallel phase shift of melatonin and TSH upon the change in sleep?wake cycle suggests that a common unitary pacemaker probably regulates these two rhythms. The reversal phase relationship between body temperature and melatonin suggests that melatonin may have a hypothermic effect on body temperature. The altered body temperature rhythm suggests that the awake status during night may inhibit the circadian decrease in body temperature and that sleep sustains the lowered body temperature. It is probable but uncertain that there are causal relationships among sleep, melatonin, TSH, and body temperature.
KEYWORD
Circadian rhythm, Sleep-Wake cycle, Melatonin, Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), Body temperature
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