TY - JOUR
T1 - Sleep and circadian rhythms in cardiovascular resilience
T2 - mechanisms, implications, and a Roadmap for research and interventions
AU - Aggarwal, Brooke
AU - Gao, Yunling
AU - Alfini, Alfonso
AU - Azarbarzin, Ali
AU - Anafi, Ron C.
AU - Glazer Baron, Kelly
AU - Bautch, Victoria L.
AU - Bowles, Nicole
AU - Broussard, Josiane L.
AU - Brown, Marishka
AU - Cheng, Philip
AU - Cook, Stephanie H.
AU - Cortese, Rene
AU - Fernandez, Fabian Xosé
AU - Galis, Zorina
AU - Johnson, Dayna A.
AU - Jelic, Sanja
AU - Lipton, Jonathan O.
AU - Lutsey, Pamela L.
AU - Miao, Qing
AU - Ordovas, Jose M.
AU - Prather, Aric A.
AU - Swirski, Filip K.
AU - Tasali, Esra
AU - Vargas, Ivan
AU - Grandner, Michael A.
AU - Lloyd-Jones, Donald
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Springer Nature Limited 2025.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - The interaction between sleep, circadian rhythms and cardiovascular resilience is a crucial yet underexplored research area with important public health implications. Disruptions in sleep and circadian rhythms exacerbate hypertension, diabetes mellitus and obesity, conditions that are increasingly prevalent globally and increase the risk of cardiovascular disease. A National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute workshop examined these connections, as well as the emerging concept of cardiovascular resilience as a dynamic and multifaceted concept spanning molecular, cellular and systemic levels across an individual’s lifespan. The workshop emphasized the need to expand the focus from solely understanding whether and how sleep and circadian rhythm disturbances contribute to disease, to also exploring how healthy sleep and aligned circadian rhythms can increase cardiovascular resilience. To develop a Roadmap towards this goal, workshop participants identified key knowledge gaps and research opportunities, including the need to integrate biological, behavioural, environmental and societal factors in sleep and circadian health with cardiovascular research to identify therapeutic targets. Proposed interventions encompass behavioural therapies, chronotherapy, lifestyle changes, organizational policies and public health initiatives aimed at improving sleep and circadian health for better cardiovascular outcomes. Future cross-disciplinary research and translation of discoveries into public health strategies and clinical practices could improve cardiovascular resilience across the lifespan in all populations.
AB - The interaction between sleep, circadian rhythms and cardiovascular resilience is a crucial yet underexplored research area with important public health implications. Disruptions in sleep and circadian rhythms exacerbate hypertension, diabetes mellitus and obesity, conditions that are increasingly prevalent globally and increase the risk of cardiovascular disease. A National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute workshop examined these connections, as well as the emerging concept of cardiovascular resilience as a dynamic and multifaceted concept spanning molecular, cellular and systemic levels across an individual’s lifespan. The workshop emphasized the need to expand the focus from solely understanding whether and how sleep and circadian rhythm disturbances contribute to disease, to also exploring how healthy sleep and aligned circadian rhythms can increase cardiovascular resilience. To develop a Roadmap towards this goal, workshop participants identified key knowledge gaps and research opportunities, including the need to integrate biological, behavioural, environmental and societal factors in sleep and circadian health with cardiovascular research to identify therapeutic targets. Proposed interventions encompass behavioural therapies, chronotherapy, lifestyle changes, organizational policies and public health initiatives aimed at improving sleep and circadian health for better cardiovascular outcomes. Future cross-disciplinary research and translation of discoveries into public health strategies and clinical practices could improve cardiovascular resilience across the lifespan in all populations.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105016760052
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105016760052#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1038/s41569-025-01188-1
DO - 10.1038/s41569-025-01188-1
M3 - Article
C2 - 40968347
AN - SCOPUS:105016760052
SN - 1759-5002
JO - Nature Reviews Cardiology
JF - Nature Reviews Cardiology
ER -