Tipología circadiana y trastornos relacionados con sustancias y adictivos

Autores/as

  • Arturo Chi Maimó Universidad de La Habana, Facultad de Ciencias Médicas "Enrique Cabrera". La Habana, Cuba. Revista del Hospital Psiquiátrico de La Habana,. La Habana, Cuba https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6212-1647

Resumen

Las diferencias individuales en la preferencia circadiana, conocida como cronotipo o tipología circadiana, pueden influir en el riesgo de desarrollar trastornos psiquiátricos.  

Se ha demostrado que la preferencia nocturna se ha asociado con la desregulación emocional, la conducta impulsiva y una mayor sensibilidad a las recompensas, factores clave en el desarrollo y mantenimiento de los trastornos relacionados con el consumo de sustancias 

Mientras que la vespertinidad constituye un factor de riesgo biológico no modificable de trastornos relacionados con sustancias

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Biografía del autor/a

Arturo Chi Maimó, Universidad de La Habana, Facultad de Ciencias Médicas "Enrique Cabrera". La Habana, Cuba. Revista del Hospital Psiquiátrico de La Habana,. La Habana, Cuba

Especialista de primer y segundo grado en Fisiología Normal y Patológica. Profesor auxiliar. Máster en Pedagogía Profesional. Investigador agregado.

Editor, Corrector de estilo de la Revista del Hospital Psiquiátrico de La Habana, Cuba

Citas

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Publicado

2026-01-29

Cómo citar

1.
Chi Maimó A. Tipología circadiana y trastornos relacionados con sustancias y adictivos. Rev. Hosp. Psiq. Hab. [Internet]. 29 de enero de 2026 [citado 3 de febrero de 2026];23. Disponible en: https://revhph.sld.cu/index.php/hph/article/view/975

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