To some extent, having a tendency to want to wake up early and go to bed early, or wake up late and go to bed late, is normal. There is a broad spectrum of chronotypes — a person’s preference to go to sleep and wake up at a particular time. At the extremes of ‘morningness’ or ‘eveningness’ are those individuals known as ‘morning larks’ or ‘evening owls’. People with delayed sleep phase syndrome can be considered extremes of the extreme, ‘evening owls’ whose circadian rhythm is so delayed that it has negative consequences on their life. As with many features of our sleep, it appears that what
To some extent, having a tendency to want to wake up early and go to bed early, or wake up late and go to bed late, is normal. There is a broad spectrum of chronotypes — a person’s preference to go to sleep and wake up at a particular time. At the extremes of ‘morningness’ or ‘eveningness’ are those individuals known as ‘morning larks’ or ‘evening owls’. People with delayed sleep phase syndrome can be considered extremes of the extreme, ‘evening owls’ whose circadian rhythm is so delayed that it has negative consequences on their life. As with many features of our sleep, it appears that what chronotype we are is to some extent determined by our genes. Studies in twins or in families suggest that up to 50 per cent of our chronotype is under genetic control, and variants in the genes that regulate our circadian rhythm have been associated with both extreme ‘eveningness’ and extreme ‘morningness’. In a familial form of what’s known as ‘advanced sleep phase syndrome’, in which sufferers want to go to bed early in the evening and wake up extremely early in the morning, much rarer than delayed sleep phase syndrome, a mutation in one particular circadian gene, called ‘PER’, has been identified. Furthermore, mutations in another one of these circadian genes, called ‘DEC2’, seem to increase the amount of time we spend awake and reduce the amount of sleep required. For most people, however, it is not these few mutations that influence their wake/sleep pattern, but likely the cumulat...
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