What is SAD?
SAD (Seasonal Affective Disorder) is a type of
winter depression that affects an estimated half a million people every
Winter between September and April, in particular during December,
January and February.
It is caused by a biochemical imbalance in the hypothalamus due to
the shortening of daylight hours and the lack of sunlight in winter.
For many people SAD is a seriously disabling illness, preventing them
from functioning normally without continuous medical treatment.
For others, it is a mild but debilitating condition causing
discomfort but not severe suffering. We call this subsyndromal SAD or
'winter blues.' Symptoms The symptoms of SAD usually recur regularly each Winter, starting
between September and November and continuing until March or April. A
diagnosis can be made after three or more consecutive Winters of
symptoms, which include a number of the following
| Sleep problems: |
Usually desire to oversleep and difficulty staying awake
but, in some cases, disturbed sleep and early morning wakening |
| Lethargy: |
Feeling of fatigue and inability to carry out normal routine |
| Overeating:
|
Craving for carbohydrates and sweet foods, usually resulting
in weight gain |
| Depression:
|
Feelings of misery, guilt and loss of self-esteem, sometimes
hopelessness and despair, sometimes apathy and loss of feelings |
| Social problems:
|
Irritability and desire to avoid social contact |
| Anxiety: |
Tension and inability to tolerate stress |
| Loss of libido
|
Decreased interest in sex and physical contact |
| Mood changes
|
In some sufferers, extremes of mood and short periods of
hypomania (overactivity) in spring and autumn. |
Most sufferers show signs of a weakened immune, system during the
Winter, and are more vulnerable to infections and other illnesses.
SAD symptoms disappear in Spring, either suddenly with a short period
(e.g., four weeks) of hypomania or hyperactivity, or gradually,
depending on the intensity of sunlight in the Spring and early Summer.
In sub-syndromal SAD, symptoms such as tiredness, lethargy, sleep and
eating problems occur, but depression and anxiety are absent or mild.
SAD may begin at any age but the main age of onset is between 18 and
30 years.
It occurs throughout the northern and southern hemispheres but is
extremely rare in those living within 30 degrees of the Equator, where
daylight hours are long, constant and extremely bright. Treating SAD
Light Therapy
Light therapy has been shown
to be effective in up to 85 per cent of
diagnosed cases. That is, exposure, for up to four hours per day
(average 1-2 hours) to very bright light, at least ten times the
intensity of ordinary domestic lighting.
Ordinary light bulbs and fittings are not strong enough. Average
domestic or office lighting emits an intensity of 200-500 lux but the
minimum dose, necessary to treat SAD is 2500 lux, The intensity of a
bright summer day can be 100,000 lux!
Light treatment should be used daily in Winter (and dull periods in
summer) starting in early Autumn when the first symptoms appear. It
consists of sitting two to three feet away from a specially designed
light box, usually on a table, allowing the light to shine directly
through the eyes.
The user can carry out normal activity such as reading, working,
eating and knitting while stationary in front of the box. It is not
necessary to stare at the light although it has been proved safe.
Treatment is usually effective within three or four days and the
effect continues provided it is used every day. Tinted lenses, or any
device that blocks the light to the retina of the eye, should not be
worn,
Some light boxes emit higher intensity of light, up to 10,000 lux,
which can cut treatment time down to half an hour a day. Antidepressant drugs
Traditional antidepressant drugs such as tricyclics are not usually
helpful for SAD as they exacerbate the sleepiness and lethargy that are
symptoms of the illness. The non-sedative SSRI drugs such as sertraline
(Lustral), paroxetine (Seroxat) and fluoxetine (Prozac) are effective in
alleviating the depressive symptoms of SAD and combine well with light
therapy.
Other psychotropic drugs e.g. lithium, benzodiazepines have not
proved widely useful in the treatment of SAD. Daily exposure to as much
natural daylight as possible, especially at midday, should help.
Psychotherapy
Psychotherapy, counseling or any complementary therapy which helps
the sufferer to relax, accept their illness and cope with its
limitations are extremely useful.
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