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A circaseptan rhythm [1] is a cycle consisting of approximately 7 days in which many[which?] biological processes of life, such as cellular immune system activity, resolve.[2][3]
- Halberg F et al. 1965: "Spectral resolution of low-frequency, small-amplitude rhythms in excreted 17-ketosteroid: probable androgen-induced circaseptan desynchronization". Acta Endocrinol. Suppl. 103, 5-54
- Kaiser H, Cornelissen G, Halberg F 1990: "Palaeochronobiology circadian rhythms, gauges of adaptive Darwinian evolution: about 7-day circaseptan rhythms, gauges of integrative evolution". In: Chronobiology - its role in clinical medicine (eds. Hayes DK, Pauly JE, Reiter RJ) Wiley-Liss Inc., New York, pp. 755–762
- Meyer-Rochow, VB; Brown, PJ (1998). "Possible natural circaseptan rhythm in the beach beetle Chaerodes trachyscelides". Acta Neurobiol Exp. 58: 287–290.
- Uezono K et al. 1987: Circaseptan rhythm in sodium and potassium excretion in salt-sensitive and salt-resistant 'Dahl rats'". Progr Clin Biol Res 227A, 297-307
- Cornélissen, G; Watson, D; Mitsutake, G; Fišer, B; Siegelová, J; Dušek, J; Vohlídalová, Svaèinová H; Halberg, F (2005). "Mapping of Circaseptan and Circadian Changes in Mood". SCR Med (Brno). 78 (2): 89–98. PMC 2577283. PMID 18985163.
- Reinberg AE, Dejardin L, Smolensky MH, Touitou Y (2017). "Seven-day human biological rhythms: An expedition in search of their origin, synchronization, functional advantage, adaptive value and clinical relevance". Chronobiol Int. 34 (2): 162–191. doi:10.1080/07420528.2016.1236807. PMID 27830946.