by Isadora Stehlin
Brought to you by HealthGate and the Food and Drug Administration
How our bodies marshal defenses against disease depends on many factors, such as age, gender and genetics. Recently, the role of our bodies' biological rhythms in fighting disease has come under study by some in the medical community.
Our bodies' rhythms, also known as our biological clocks, take their cue from the environment and the rhythms of the solar system that change night to day and lead one season into another. Our internal clocks are also dictated by our genetic makeup. These clocks influence how our bodies change throughout the day, affecting blood pressure, blood coagulation, blood flow, and other functions.
Some of the rhythms that affect our bodies include:
Coordinating biological rhythms (chronobiology) with medical treatment is called chronotherapy. It considers a person's biological rhythms in determining the timing--and sometimes the amount--of medication to optimize a drug's desired effects and minimize the undesired ones.
According to Smolensky, patients are more likely to follow schedules for taking their medications when those medications are formulated as chronotherapies because of better medical results and fewer adverse side effects. "With better compliance, the disease can be better contained, which means fewer doctor visits and potential trips to the hospital because of acute flare-ups," he says.
The area in which chronotherapy is most advanced--drug chronotherapy--for the most part does not involve new medicines but using old ones differently. Revising the dosing schedule, reformulating a drug so its release into the bloodstream is delayed, or using programmable pumps that deliver medicine at precise intervals are some of the simple changes that may reap enormous benefits. Drugs that are reformulated as chronotherapeutics are regulated by the Food and Drug Administration.
Here's a look at how chronotherapy is being used or studied for various diseases.
Brought to you by HealthGate and the Food and Drug Administration
How our bodies marshal defenses against disease depends on many factors, such as age, gender and genetics. Recently, the role of our bodies' biological rhythms in fighting disease has come under study by some in the medical community.
Our bodies' rhythms, also known as our biological clocks, take their cue from the environment and the rhythms of the solar system that change night to day and lead one season into another. Our internal clocks are also dictated by our genetic makeup. These clocks influence how our bodies change throughout the day, affecting blood pressure, blood coagulation, blood flow, and other functions.
Some of the rhythms that affect our bodies include:
- ultradian - which are cycles shorter than a day (for example, the milliseconds it takes for a neuron to fire, or a 90-minute sleep cycle)
- circadian -which last about 24 hours (such as sleeping and waking patterns)
- infradian - referring to cycles longer than 24 hours (for example monthly menstruation)
- seasonal - - such as seasonal affective disorder (SAD), which causes depression in susceptible people during the short days of winter.
Coordinating biological rhythms (chronobiology) with medical treatment is called chronotherapy. It considers a person's biological rhythms in determining the timing--and sometimes the amount--of medication to optimize a drug's desired effects and minimize the undesired ones.
According to Smolensky, patients are more likely to follow schedules for taking their medications when those medications are formulated as chronotherapies because of better medical results and fewer adverse side effects. "With better compliance, the disease can be better contained, which means fewer doctor visits and potential trips to the hospital because of acute flare-ups," he says.
The area in which chronotherapy is most advanced--drug chronotherapy--for the most part does not involve new medicines but using old ones differently. Revising the dosing schedule, reformulating a drug so its release into the bloodstream is delayed, or using programmable pumps that deliver medicine at precise intervals are some of the simple changes that may reap enormous benefits. Drugs that are reformulated as chronotherapeutics are regulated by the Food and Drug Administration.
Here's a look at how chronotherapy is being used or studied for various diseases.