Objective Measures of Immediate “Energizing” Effect of Light: Studies Review and Data Analysis

While the energizing effect of light has been known since the early years of light therapy, its reliable detection using objective measures is still not well-established. This review aims to ascertain the immediate energizing effect of light and determine its best indicators. Sixty-four articles pub...

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Main Author: Konstantin V. Danilenko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-09-01
Series:Clocks & Sleep
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2624-5175/4/4/38
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author Konstantin V. Danilenko
author_facet Konstantin V. Danilenko
author_sort Konstantin V. Danilenko
collection DOAJ
description While the energizing effect of light has been known since the early years of light therapy, its reliable detection using objective measures is still not well-established. This review aims to ascertain the immediate energizing effect of light and determine its best indicators. Sixty-four articles published before July 2022 were included in the review. The articles described 72 (sub-)studies performed in healthy individuals. Fourteen measures were analyzed. The analysis showed that light causes an energizing effect that can be best documented by measuring core (rectal) body temperature: the proportion of the studies revealing increasing, unchanging, and decreasing rectal temperature was 13/6/1. The second most suitable indicator was heart rate (10/22/1), which showed concordant changes with rectal temperature (a trend, seven mutual studies). There is no evidence from the reviewed articles that oxygen consumption, skin conductance, blood pressure, heart rate variability, non-rectal inner temperature (combined digestive, tympanic, and oral), skin temperature, or cortisol levels can provide light effect detection. Four other measures were found to be unsuitable as well but with less certainty due to the low number of studies (≤3): skin blood flow, noradrenaline, salivary alpha-amylase, and thyroid-stimulating hormone levels. On the other hand, light exposure had a noticeable effect on sympathetic nerve activity measured using microneurography; however, this measure can be accepted as a marker only tentatively as it was employed in a single study. The analysis took into account three factors—study limitation in design/analysis, use of light in day- or nighttime, and relative brightness of the light stimulus—that were found to significantly influence some of the analyzed variables. The review indicates that the energizing effect of light in humans can be reliably detected using rectal temperature and heart rate.
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spelling doaj.art-ab053dc4662d400090a9041f9cfa36f52023-11-24T14:05:30ZengMDPI AGClocks & Sleep2624-51752022-09-014447549610.3390/clockssleep4040038Objective Measures of Immediate “Energizing” Effect of Light: Studies Review and Data AnalysisKonstantin V. Danilenko0Institute of Neurosciences and Medicine, 630117 Novosibirsk, RussiaWhile the energizing effect of light has been known since the early years of light therapy, its reliable detection using objective measures is still not well-established. This review aims to ascertain the immediate energizing effect of light and determine its best indicators. Sixty-four articles published before July 2022 were included in the review. The articles described 72 (sub-)studies performed in healthy individuals. Fourteen measures were analyzed. The analysis showed that light causes an energizing effect that can be best documented by measuring core (rectal) body temperature: the proportion of the studies revealing increasing, unchanging, and decreasing rectal temperature was 13/6/1. The second most suitable indicator was heart rate (10/22/1), which showed concordant changes with rectal temperature (a trend, seven mutual studies). There is no evidence from the reviewed articles that oxygen consumption, skin conductance, blood pressure, heart rate variability, non-rectal inner temperature (combined digestive, tympanic, and oral), skin temperature, or cortisol levels can provide light effect detection. Four other measures were found to be unsuitable as well but with less certainty due to the low number of studies (≤3): skin blood flow, noradrenaline, salivary alpha-amylase, and thyroid-stimulating hormone levels. On the other hand, light exposure had a noticeable effect on sympathetic nerve activity measured using microneurography; however, this measure can be accepted as a marker only tentatively as it was employed in a single study. The analysis took into account three factors—study limitation in design/analysis, use of light in day- or nighttime, and relative brightness of the light stimulus—that were found to significantly influence some of the analyzed variables. The review indicates that the energizing effect of light in humans can be reliably detected using rectal temperature and heart rate.https://www.mdpi.com/2624-5175/4/4/38healthy subjectslightimmediate effectphysiological measures
spellingShingle Konstantin V. Danilenko
Objective Measures of Immediate “Energizing” Effect of Light: Studies Review and Data Analysis
Clocks & Sleep
healthy subjects
light
immediate effect
physiological measures
title Objective Measures of Immediate “Energizing” Effect of Light: Studies Review and Data Analysis
title_full Objective Measures of Immediate “Energizing” Effect of Light: Studies Review and Data Analysis
title_fullStr Objective Measures of Immediate “Energizing” Effect of Light: Studies Review and Data Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Objective Measures of Immediate “Energizing” Effect of Light: Studies Review and Data Analysis
title_short Objective Measures of Immediate “Energizing” Effect of Light: Studies Review and Data Analysis
title_sort objective measures of immediate energizing effect of light studies review and data analysis
topic healthy subjects
light
immediate effect
physiological measures
url https://www.mdpi.com/2624-5175/4/4/38
work_keys_str_mv AT konstantinvdanilenko objectivemeasuresofimmediateenergizingeffectoflightstudiesreviewanddataanalysis