NeuroTalk Support Groups

NeuroTalk Support Groups (https://www.neurotalk.org/)
-   Bipolar Disorder (https://www.neurotalk.org/bipolar-disorder/)
-   -   S.A.D....battling seasonal depression (https://www.neurotalk.org/bipolar-disorder/4170-battling-seasonal-depression.html)

bizi 10-19-2006 08:03 AM

S.A.D....battling seasonal depression
 
Battling Seasonal Depression

The shorter daylight hours of autumn and winter can affect sleep, productivity and state of mind. Light therapy (also known as phototherapy) may help. It uses specially designed boxes that emit full-spectrum light to simulate sunlight. While still a relatively unknown treatment, light therapy has been shown to have positive benefits in addressing many health issues, including Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD), severe premenstrual syndrome, bulimia, and as a non-drug treatment for depression. If you have been suffering from SAD or just feel a little blue this time of year, contact your physician or healthcare provider - depression is a treatable condition; light therapy may be an option he or she recommends for you.

Nikko 10-20-2006 11:26 AM

This is very true, when I lived back in the North East, I sufferend from SAD.

One thing I did, was go to tanning places, it helped a bit.


Nikko

coyote 10-20-2006 07:57 PM

I wonder if the radiation we get from sitting in front of the computer screen is as good as one of thoses lamps?;)

highhatsize 10-20-2006 11:21 PM

Daylight Savings Time Ends
 
Daylight Savings Time ENDS this Sunday, October 29th, at 2 a.m. This means that those dark 6 p.m.'s will become sunny again. Since we don't notice the sun when we are awaking, perhaps noticing another hour of it when we are growing tired will help S.A.D., (or not).

If I suspected that I was affected by S.A.D., I would equip one small room, (or large closet), in the house with extremely bright daylight spectrum lamps and stay in it whenever possible. It seems one of the cheaper fixes.

bizi 11-24-2006 08:47 PM

Treatment of SAD
Treatment studies of light therapy have shown increasingly rigorous methodology with larger sample sizes, less diagnostic heterogeneity, longer treatment periods, and parallel instead of crossover designs. Wavelength of light used in light therapy was examined in two studies. In one study, the ultraviolet (UV) spectrum did not add to the therapeutic efficacy of light therapy [14*]. Because of the potential harmful effects of long-term W exposure, light therapy devices should have W filters that block wavelengths below 400 nm. In a comparison light box study, cool-white fluorescent lights were as effective as full-spectrum fluorescent lights [15], adding evidence to other studies showing that various light sources (including incandescent lights) are effective for treating SAD.

Devices other than light boxes were also studied for light therapy. Two recent studies, with the largest sample sizes in light therapy studies to date, used a light visor [16*,17*]. In both studies, there was no relationship between the intensity of light and various measures of response to treatment, despite the fact that very low intensity light (60 lux) was used. This contrasts to most light box studies where a dear intensity-response relationship is found. Several explanations may explain this discrepancy. The proximity of the visor light source to the eye may increase the amount of light that reaches the retina, as compared to a light box. Lux, a unit of illumination, may also not be the best measure of the biologic or therapeutic effect of light. There is increasing evidence that even low illumination can affect biologic parameters [18], so that for some patients, light as low as 100 lux may be therapeutically effective. Finally, although the response rate was high in both studies (over 60% by strictly defined criteria), a non-specific (placebo) effect of light therapy must also be considered. In this regard, a light box study by Eastman and associates [19**] using a non-light control condition (a negative ion generator that, unknown to subjects, was turned off), found no differences between the control condition and bright light treatment (7000 lux for 1 hour in the morning). However, the response rate for the bright light condition (29%) was unusually low compared to other treatment studies. The selection criteria and unusually sunny weather during
the course of their study may have excluded more light-responsive patients. Thus, the issue of placebo effects in light therapy remains unresolved.

The Seattle group conducted a series of studies investigating dawn simulation in SAD [20,21,22*]. Dawn simulation uses a device that gradually increases illumination exposure, while the patient is sleeping, to simulate a summer dawn during the winter. Significant improvement occurred using dawn simulation compared to various control conditions, despite a final illumination as low as 250 lux.

Two groups studying predictors for light therapy found that hypersomnia and hyperphagia predicted clinical response [23*,24,25*]. Another study, however, reported that only high consumption of sweets in the latter half of the day predicted response to treatment [26*]. Of interest is that prospective measures of sleep and eating were used in the latter study, whereas the other studies used global patient self-report.

Light therapy has been considered a rather benign treatment with few side effects. A systematic report of side effects to light therapy using a light visor showed that approximately 20% of patients reported mild side effects, including headache, eyestrain, and "feeling wired" [27]. A more controversial topic is the potential for prolonged bright light exposure to produce harmful effects on the retina. The intensities of light used in light therapy regimens are not considered harmful to the human retina based on short term studies, but the retinal effects of long term bright light exposure are not known. Some investigators have called for routine ophthalmologic evaluation prior to starting light therapy because of the small, potential risk of aggravating previously unrecognized retinal conditions (e.g. macular degeneration) [28*]. Others suggest ophthalmologic screening only in patients with a history of pre-existing retinal disease, patients taking highly photosensitizing drugs, and the elderly [29*]. Empiric data are still sparse, but a recently reported five-year prospective study of patients on chronic light therapy has not shown any significant clinical or electrophysiologic changes in the eyes [30].

Finally, antidepressant drugs are also being studied in SAD. An open study showed efficacy of bupropion in treating SAD [31*]. One case-study suggested that citaloprim, a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, was as effective as light therapy [321. Fluoxetine was reported to be as effective as light therapy for SAD [33*], and results from at least two double-blind studies of serotonin reuptake inhibitors in SAD will soon be available. What remains a question is whether a combination of medications and light therapy is more effective than either alone.

DiMarie 11-27-2006 12:34 AM

Sad
 
I hate this time of the year it affects me hard. Especially as we went through ten cloudy rainy days. I did tan. I was in Fl. for 6 days and loved the feel of sun on my bones.

I try everything in the fall and winter, throw open the drapes, sit in the side of the house the light is streaming in, if it does. But, alas, many days I lack the energy to get out of bed until just before my husband walks through, or I have to leave for work.

I am trying tanning once a week, twice if I have the motivation, for 20 minutes right now. I am draggin tired when leaving there as I am ready to fall asleep from the heat, lol.
I wish they could bottle sun in a pill! I am killing carrots right now....eating tons of them. Taking my vitamins, but still would love a week in the southern part of the world!

If there were some proven lights I could put in my home, I WOULD try it!
Di


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:55 PM.

Powered by vBulletin • Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

vBulletin Optimisation provided by vB Optimise v2.7.1 (Lite) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2024 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.