Four Congenitally Blind Children With Circadian Sleep-Wake Rhythm Disorder
Author(s) -
Masako Okawa,
Toshiyuki Nanami,
Shu Wada,
Tetsuo Shimizu,
Yasuo Hishikawa,
Hideo Sasaki,
H. Nagamine,
Keiichi Takahashi
Publication year - 1987
Publication title -
sleep
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.222
H-Index - 207
eISSN - 1550-9109
pISSN - 0161-8105
DOI - 10.1093/sleep/10.2.101
Subject(s) - rhythm , circadian rhythm , zeitgeber , chronotherapy (sleep phase) , free running sleep , psychology , dark therapy , infradian rhythm , chronobiology , medicine , audiology , ultradian rhythm , neuroscience , light effects on circadian rhythm , circadian clock
Four congenitally blind children aged 4-12 years, with severe or moderate mental retardation, were chronobiologically studied. Three of them showed a free-running rhythm of sleep-wake, and the fourth showed an irregular sleep-wake rhythm. To entrain their sleep-wake rhythm to a 24-h rhythm, several trials based on chronotherapy were performed. The free-running rhythms in the three children were considered their own endogenous rhythms, revealed through some disorder in the mechanism synchronizing the endogenous rhythm to the normal 24-h environmental rhythm. The irregular sleep-wake rhythm in the fourth child may have been the result of immaturity or failure of the pacemaker of the circadian rhythm. Because of their severe mental retardation, all the children were lacking in social time cues, which are the most potent "Zeitgebers" for human biological clocks.
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