Reinberg A, Andlauer P, Teinturier P, De Prins J, Malbecq W, Dupont J
C R Seances Acad Sci III. 1983;296(6):267-70.
15 night workers (mean age, 28 years; mean seniority 1.5 years) volunteered to measure their oral temperature (clinical thermometers 0.05 degrees C precision) 5 times/24 hrs. during a 21 day span. Time series were analyzed individually according to 3 methods. 11 of the subjects with a good tolerance had (with one exception) their prominent circadian period tau equal to 24 hrs. as well as a relatively large circadian amplitude (A from 0.19 to 0.42 degrees C). By contrast, subjects with a poor tolerance (sleep disorders, persisting fatigue, psychological troubles, etc.) had a tau value ranging from 24.9 to 25.7 hrs. associated with a relatively small rhythm amplitude (A from 0.04 to 0.13 degrees C). These results support the hypothesis that a desynchronisation of circadian rhythms help to explain why certain subjects do not tolerate shiftwork.