Abstract
Twenty-three clinically healthy, diurnally active elderly subjects, 71 ± 5 years of age were studied over a 24-hr span (six samples). Complete blood counts and differential counts were done (Ortho ELT-8, Wright stained smears). The circadian rhythm parameters of the hematologic variables in the elderly subjects were compared with reference values obtained from a larger group of clinically healthy young adult and adult subjects studied independently. The data were analyzed by cosinor and the Bingham test. Circadian rhythms in the number of circulating formed elements in the peripheral blood persist in the aged. In comparison with the young adult, the elderly subjects show differences in the timing (phase advance) of the circadian rhythms in circulating neutrophil leukocytes and lymphocytes, a decrease in the circadian amplitude of circulating platelets, a decrease in circadian rhythm adjusted mean (mesor) in the red cell count, and in the neutrophil band forms.