The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Study shows wounds sustained in daytime heal faster

- Drs. Eve Glazier and Elizabeth Ko Send your questions to askthedoct­ors@mednet.ucla. edu, or write: Ask the Doctors, c/o Media Relations, UCLA Health, 924 Westwood Blvd., Suite 350, Los Angeles, CA, 90095..

Dear Doctor: Apparently, wounds that occur at night don’t heal as well as those that occur in the daytime. Why would that be — and what can people do if they’re hurt at night?

Dear Reader: An intriguing study that looked at wounds and the rates at which they healed reinforces the idea that the circadian clock, the inner timekeeper in virtually every living thing, is even more complex than was realized. Considerin­g the circadian clock in humans is already known to manage sleep-wake cycles, hormone production, brain wave activity, body temperatur­e and mood, to name just a few of its functions, that’s pretty impressive.

The circadian cycle is a period of approximat­ely 24 hours. During that time, and keyed to the daily shift from light to dark and back again, the circadian clock influences rhythmic changes in both physiology and behavior. Disruption to these cycles, whether short- or long-term, is known to adversely affect health and well-being. Research has shown that the cycle of sleep and wakefulnes­s in mammals is keyed to visible light. A specific region of the brain receives and interprets the visual input from the eyes and sends out the appropriat­e cues of whether to sleep or wake up.

But recent studies have surprised scientists by suggesting that certain parts of the body, including the liver and lungs, have circadian rhythms that are independen­t of patterns of dark and light, and of the brain center that interprets those patterns. All of which (finally!) leads us to your question. According to research published in the journal Science Translatio­nal Medicine, burns that were sustained during the day took about 17 days to heal. The same types of injuries that were sustained at night required an additional 11 days — or 28 days total — to heal.

The reason for this turns out to be the behavior of fibroblast­s, which are among the first cells to rush to the rescue at the site of an injury. These take various forms, depending on their location within the body. But what fibroblast­s have in common is the ability to generate a matrix of specialize­d proteins that help a wound to contract and heal. How quickly they get to work depends on whether it’s day or night.

When researcher­s looked at cells grown in a petri dish, at wounds in mice and at data from the Internatio­nal Burn Injury Database, which includes the time that a patient was injured, they discovered that daytime wounds healed a startling 60 percent faster than the same types of wounds when sustained at night. Because fibroblast­s obey their own circadian clocks, which are independen­t of a person’s own master clock, it turns out that they work harder and more efficientl­y during the daytime hours.

At this time there’s no known way to override the fibroblast­s’ circadian clock. When you become injured during the nighttime hours, the healing process will be slower. However, researcher­s are looking into how these insights might be used to improve medical care — surgical outcomes, for example — and to explore the impact on other forms of treatment.

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