Decades of Night-Shift Work Induce Diurnal Disruption and Corneal Adaptations: Evidence from Pentacam Analysis
Bence Lajos Kolozsvári, Éva Surányi, Zsuzsa Zakarné Aszalós, Vivien Lénárt, Reda Chaker, Géza Vitályos, Mariann Fodor

TL;DR
Long-term night-shift work changes corneal properties, showing both disruption and adaptation.
Contribution
This study reveals adaptive corneal changes due to long-term night-shift work using Pentacam analysis.
Findings
Corneal parameters showed significant periodic fluctuations in night-shift workers.
Prolonged night shift work did not increase surface variance index (ISV).
No evidence of age-related corneal thinning was observed.
Abstract
We aimed to determine the effects of night-shift work on corneal parameters in thirty-five healthy individuals (24–59 years) in a retrospective cohort study. Among them, 12 hospital nurses regularly worked two shifts, spending a third of their nights awake, whereas 23 age-matched controls never worked shifts and slept regularly. Measurements were performed at least five times within 12 h. We analyzed the keratometric parameters of the corneal front (F) and back (B) surfaces, including the refractive power in the flattest and steepest axes (K1, K2), astigmatism (Astig); and corneal pachymetry (Pachy) at the thinnest corneal point and pupil center, volume relative to the 10 mm corneal diagonal (Vol D10); and surface variance index (ISV). A multilevel mixed-effects linear regression adjusted for age was applied to 905 measurements. All parameters exhibited significant periodic fluctuations…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCircadian rhythm and melatonin · Impact of Light on Environment and Health · Corneal surgery and disorders
