Chronic Circadian Rhythm Alteration Effects on Lung Function and Immune Response
by Helida C Aquino Santos / Universidade Brasil
Available on 1 platform
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Description
A clinical study compares lung function and immune markers between 25 shiftwork policemen and 25 civil men on a fixed schedule. The dataset likely contains anthropometric measurements, perceived stress scores, sleepiness levels, lung function metrics (FVC, FEV1), and cytokine levels (IL-2, IL-10). It was authored by Helida C Aquino Santos of Universidade Brasil and shared via Paperswithcode.
Use Cases
Analyze the correlation between shift work schedules and impaired lung function based on FVC and FEV1 measurements.
Investigate the relationship between circadian disruption and systemic inflammation based on IL-2 and IL-10 cytokine levels.
Model the association between perceived stress levels and markers of chronic lung inflammation based on exhaled nitric oxide data.
Compare immune response profiles between occupational groups based on cellular and humoral immune measurements.
Strengths
Includes a control group of 25 civil men for comparison with the 25 shiftwork policemen.
Reports specific, statistically significant findings (p-values) for key metrics like perceived stress (p<0.0008) and IL-2 levels (p<0.002).
Measures a multi-faceted physiological profile including lung function, systemic immune markers, and subjective well-being.
Limitations
Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment.
Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
Last update date is unknown; freshness unverified.
Provenance
Source
Helida C Aquino Santos, Universidade Brasil
Collection Method
Clinical study comparing shiftwork policemen to civil men, evaluating perceived stress, sleepiness, physical activity, anthropometrics, lung function, and immune response.
License is listed as Open Access (green), but specific terms are not detailed.