Improving daytime sleep with Temazepam as a countermeasure for shift lag

Working night shift (reverse cycle) presents problems to personnel due to the difficulty in maintaining alertness during the nighttime hours. When the shift must be worked several consecutive nights, a cumulative sleep debt is created. Appropriate countermeasures are required to help personnel obtai...

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Veröffentlicht in:Aviation, space, and environmental medicine space, and environmental medicine, 2003-02, Vol.74 (2), p.153-163
Hauptverfasser: CALDWELL, J. Lynn, PRAZINKO, Brian F, ROWE, Terri, NORMAN, David, HALL, Kecia K, CALDWELL, John A
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container_end_page 163
container_issue 2
container_start_page 153
container_title Aviation, space, and environmental medicine
container_volume 74
creator CALDWELL, J. Lynn
PRAZINKO, Brian F
ROWE, Terri
NORMAN, David
HALL, Kecia K
CALDWELL, John A
description Working night shift (reverse cycle) presents problems to personnel due to the difficulty in maintaining alertness during the nighttime hours. When the shift must be worked several consecutive nights, a cumulative sleep debt is created. Appropriate countermeasures are required to help personnel obtain as much sleep as possible so they may perform their duties effectively. The objectives were to determine whether a hypnotic taken before daytime sleep would improve sleep quality, and to determine whether improved daytime sleep would increase alertness, reduce fatigue, and mitigate the usual performance decrements which occur on night shift. Sixteen UH-60 Army aviators were randomly assigned to either a temazepam or a placebo group. Test sessions, consisting of vigilance assessments, flight simulation, and mood state questionnaires were administered during baseline, three nights of reverse cycle, and three days following a return to day shift. Temazepam (30 mg) was administered before daytime sleep to one group while another group received a lactose-filled capsule. Subjects who received temazepam slept longer and with less fragmentation than those who received placebo. Generally, the subjects in the temazepam group indicated more subjective alertness and less fatigue than those in the placebo group. Flight performance was not unequivocally improved by better daytime sleep, but the temazepam group performed better on the Psychomotor Vigilance Task than the placebo group. Temazepam is helpful in prolonging daytime sleep, with some attenuation of performance decrements during the night shift. However, physicians should be careful when administering this substance to ensure the aviator has a minimum of 8 h in which to sleep.
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subjects Administration, Oral
Adult
Aerospace Medicine
Affect
Anti-Anxiety Agents - administration & dosage
Anti-Anxiety Agents - pharmacology
Attention
Biological and medical sciences
Circadian Rhythm
Cognition - drug effects
Double-Blind Method
Fatigue
Female
Humans
Male
Medical sciences
Motor Skills
Neuropharmacology
Personnel Staffing and Scheduling
Pharmacology. Drug treatments
Placebos
Psycholeptics: tranquillizer, neuroleptic
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopharmacology
Reaction Time
Sleep - drug effects
Sleep Deprivation
Space life sciences
Task Performance and Analysis
Temazepam - administration & dosage
Temazepam - pharmacology
title Improving daytime sleep with Temazepam as a countermeasure for shift lag
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