Lee Kyung Hwa, Lee Ha Young, Jeon Jeong Eun, Lee Mi Hyun, Lee Jooyoung, Shin Jiyoon, Seo Min Cheol, Lee Yu Jin, Kim Seog Ju
Department of Psychiatry and Center for Sleep and Chronobiology, Seoul National University, College of Medicine and Hospital, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
J Sleep Res. 2025 Oct;34(5):e70052. doi: 10.1111/jsr.70052. Epub 2025 Apr 3.
We examined the neural basis of emotion regulation in shift workers, and the relationships between the neural basis of emotion regulation, mood, sleep disturbance and 24-h rest-activity rhythm (RAR). Fifty-six shift workers (SW) with non-standard shift schedules and 52 controls (CON) participated in this study. They completed self-reported measures of sleep and mood problems, kept a sleep diary, and wore a wrist actigraphy device to assess sleep and 24-h RAR. They underwent one-night polysomnography and were scanned while performing an emotion regulation task. We examined group differences in the neural basis of emotion regulation and correlations between neural, mood, sleep and 24-h RAR variables. SW showed greater sleep disturbance (i.e., lower actigraphy-estimated sleep efficiency) and altered 24-h RAR (e.g., lower actigraphy-estimated interdaily stability) than CON. SW also exhibited increased anterior insula (AI) response to negative pictures (vs. neutral pictures) but reduced activation in the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dMPFC) and AI-dMPFC functional connectivity during emotion regulation compared to CON. Shift work was associated with increased motor activity during the most active 10-h period, which then contributed to increased AI response to negative pictures. Our findings suggest that shift work may be associated with the neurobiological alterations of emotion regulation. Furthermore, increased motor activity may serve as a pathway through which shift work could contribute to neurobiological alterations associated with emotional regulation.
我们研究了轮班工作者情绪调节的神经基础,以及情绪调节的神经基础、情绪、睡眠障碍和24小时休息-活动节律(RAR)之间的关系。56名非标准轮班时间表的轮班工作者(SW)和52名对照组(CON)参与了这项研究。他们完成了关于睡眠和情绪问题的自我报告测量,记录了睡眠日记,并佩戴腕部活动记录仪来评估睡眠和24小时RAR。他们接受了一晚的多导睡眠图检查,并在执行情绪调节任务时接受扫描。我们研究了情绪调节神经基础的组间差异以及神经、情绪、睡眠和24小时RAR变量之间的相关性。与CON相比,SW表现出更大的睡眠障碍(即活动记录仪估计的睡眠效率更低)和24小时RAR改变(例如,活动记录仪估计的日间稳定性更低)。与CON相比,SW在情绪调节期间对负面图片(相对于中性图片)的前脑岛(AI)反应也增加,但背内侧前额叶皮质(dMPFC)的激活减少,且AI-dMPFC功能连接降低。轮班工作与最活跃的10小时期间运动活动增加有关,这进而导致AI对负面图片的反应增加。我们的研究结果表明,轮班工作可能与情绪调节的神经生物学改变有关。此外,增加的运动活动可能是轮班工作导致与情绪调节相关神经生物学改变的一条途径。