Table 1.
A summary of the studies that objectively assessed changes in the circadian pattern of body temperature during diurnal intermittent fasting for Ramadan
Study | Study population | Study design | Assessment tool | Study setting | Findings | Study details |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Roky et al25 | 8 healthy young adults (age: 20–28 years) Location: Morocco | Case crossover study with repeated measures | Rectal thermistor probe for at least 24 hours | Monitoring at home Controlled for meal composition and time, as well as bedtime and rising time | Delay in acrophase and bathyphase | The participants were of the intermediate chronotype as determined by the Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire Dinner was served 1 hour before bedtime during Ramadan and 3 hours before bedtime at baseline No objective assessment of prior sleep pattern |
Roky et al26 | 10 healthy young adults (age: 20–28 years) Location: Morocco | Case crossover study with repeated measures | High-precision medical oral thermometer at 09:00, 11:00, 13:00, 16:00, 20:00, and 23:00 | Monitoring at home Controlled for meal composition and time, and bed and rise time | Reversal of circadian pattern of temperature | Subjects were of the intermediate chronotype as determined by the Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire Sleep duration was 1 hour shorter during Ramadan than at baseline No objective assessment of prior sleep pattern |
BaHammam et al30 | 8 healthy young adults (age: 31.8±2 years) Location: Saudi Arabia | Case crossover study with repeated measures | High-precision medical oral thermometer at 08:00, 16:00, and 00:00 | Monitoring in the laboratory Controlled for meal composition | No change | No objective assessment of prior sleep pattern Subjects stayed in the laboratory during monitoring |
BaHammam et al24 | 6 healthy young adults with delayed sleep phase disorder (age: 18–24 years) Location: Saudi Arabia | Case crossover study with repeated measures | SenseWear Pro Armband™ that measures proximal skin temperature during the last week of Shaban and the first 2 weeks of Ramadan | Free-living environment | Further delay in temperature acrophase | Subjects belonged to the evening chronotype Sleep patterns were monitored for 2 weeks prior to the study by using sleep diaries (no objective assessment) Sleep/wake schedule and sleep duration during the study were assessed objectively via armband Participants lived in an unconstrained environment during the study |