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circadian rhythm |
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circadian rhythmMetabolic rhythm found in most organisms, which roughly coincides with the 24-hour day and is re-adjusted to precise day-length by light-sensitive mechanisms. Its most obvious manifestation is the regular cycle of sleeping and waking, but body temperature and the concentration of hormones that influence mood and behaviour also vary over the day. In humans, alteration of habits (such as rapid air travel round the world) may result in the circadian rhythm being out of phase with actual activity patterns, causing malaise until it has had time to adjust. At the cellular level, circadian rhythms can be observed as a negative feedback loop in the activity of two genes, known as ‘period’ and ‘timeless’ in the fruit fly Drosophila. Similar cellular circadian clocks have been found in cells from many different body parts of animals, implying that there must be a central clock that controls the local ones.
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| Those of us interested in circadian rhythms and cancer predicted this a long time ago," says epidemiologist Richard Stevens of the University of Connecticut Health Center in Farmington. Under normal conditions our body maintains what is called a circadian rhythm (from the Latin circa dies, meaning "approximately one day"). There was no impairment of the circadian rhythm and pulsatile secretion of the measured sexual hormones seen in this study. |
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