BACKGROUND: The use of electronic devices emitting blue light during evening hours has been associated with sleep disturbances in humans, possibly due to the blue light-mediated suppression of the sleep-promoting hormone melatonin. However, experimental results have been mixed. The present study therefore sought to investigate if reading on a self-luminous tablet during evening hours would alter sleepiness, melatonin secretion, nocturnal sleep, as well as electroencephalographic power spectral density during early slow-wave sleep. METHODS: Following a constant bright light exposure over 6.5 hours (~569 lux), 14 participants (six females) read a novel either on a tablet or as physical book for two hours (21:00-23:00). Evening concentrations of saliva melatonin were repeatedly measured. Sleep (23:15-07:15) was recorded by polysomnography. Sleepiness was assessed before and after nocturnal sleep. About one week later, experiments were repeated; participants who had read the novel on a tablet in the first experimental session continued reading the same novel in the physical book, and vice versa. RESULTS: There were no differences in sleep parameters and pre-sleep saliva melatonin levels between the tablet reading and physical book reading conditions. CONCLUSIONS: Bright light exposure during daytime has previously been shown to abolish the inhibitory effects of evening light stimulus on melatonin secretion. Our results could therefore suggest that exposure to bright light during the day - as in the present study - may help combat sleep disturbances associated with the evening use of electronic devices emitting blue light. However, this needs to be validated by future studies with larger sample populations.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: The use of electronic devices emitting blue light during evening hours has been associated with sleep disturbances in humans, possibly due to the blue light-mediated suppression of the sleep-promoting hormone melatonin. However, experimental results have been mixed. The present study therefore sought to investigate if reading on a self-luminous tablet during evening hours would alter sleepiness, melatonin secretion, nocturnal sleep, as well as electroencephalographic power spectral density during early slow-wave sleep. METHODS: Following a constant bright light exposure over 6.5 hours (~569 lux), 14 participants (six females) read a novel either on a tablet or as physical book for two hours (21:00-23:00). Evening concentrations of saliva melatonin were repeatedly measured. Sleep (23:15-07:15) was recorded by polysomnography. Sleepiness was assessed before and after nocturnal sleep. About one week later, experiments were repeated; participants who had read the novel on a tablet in the first experimental session continued reading the same novel in the physical book, and vice versa. RESULTS: There were no differences in sleep parameters and pre-sleep saliva melatonin levels between the tablet reading and physical book reading conditions. CONCLUSIONS: Bright light exposure during daytime has previously been shown to abolish the inhibitory effects of evening light stimulus on melatonin secretion. Our results could therefore suggest that exposure to bright light during the day - as in the present study - may help combat sleep disturbances associated with the evening use of electronic devices emitting blue light. However, this needs to be validated by future studies with larger sample populations.
Authors: Megumi Hatori; Claude Gronfier; Russell N Van Gelder; Paul S Bernstein; Josep Carreras; Satchidananda Panda; Frederick Marks; David Sliney; Charles E Hunt; Tsuyoshi Hirota; Toshiharu Furukawa; Kazuo Tsubota Journal: NPJ Aging Mech Dis Date: 2017-06-16
Authors: Grace E Vincent; Charlotte C Gupta; Madeline Sprajcer; Corneel Vandelanotte; Mitch J Duncan; Phil Tucker; Michele Lastella; Georgia A Tuckwell; Sally A Ferguson Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2020-07-27 Impact factor: 2.692
Authors: Kate Porcheret; Lucien Wald; Lin Fritschi; Menno Gerkema; Marijke Gordijn; Martha Merrrow; Shantha M W Rajaratnam; Daniel Rock; Tracey L Sletten; Guy Warman; Katharina Wulff; Till Roenneberg; Russell G Foster Journal: Chronobiol Int Date: 2018-06-18 Impact factor: 2.877
Authors: Martin Gillies Banke Rasmussen; Jesper Pedersen; Line Grønholt Olesen; Søren Brage; Heidi Klakk; Peter Lund Kristensen; Jan Christian Brønd; Anders Grøntved Journal: BMC Public Health Date: 2020-03-23 Impact factor: 3.295