Natural Therapies to turn your
SAD Days into Better Days
SAD in long
form is known as Seasonal
Affective Disorder. This
problem is most common during
the winter months when there is
lack of direct sunlight and
normally recedes when the spring
and summer months arrive.
The symptom most often
associated with SAD is
depression for unknown reasons
accompanied by a desire to sleep
more and eat starchy, sweet
foods.
Many more
cases of SAD are reported in
countries with northern
altitudes as they receive less
sunlight than those around the
equator. Additionally,
many people who work evening and
night shifts and sleep during
the day have been noted to
display similar characteristics
as those found in SAD patients.
This just further suggests the
importance of sunlight on
everyday function. Women
and younger people tend to
report the highest cases of SAD
and most people report the
disorder during the months of
January and February.
It wasn’t until the early 1980’s that this disorder was actually defined and became well known within the medical community. However, in the medical literature, SAD can read about as early as 1845.
So, what causes SAD and why does it appear and disappear in symphony with the sun’s rays?
When it’s dark, the pineal gland, buried within the human brain, secretes a hormone called melatonin. In a cascade of events melatonin is responsible for the formation of serotonin – the sleeping hormone – and also for increased levels of depression. It makes sense then that when there is more darkness and less sunlight during the daytime hours, as is the case during the winter, that our brains increase the secretion of melatonin leading to an increased chance of developing symptoms of depression.
As soon as the sun begins shining more frequently and longer during the spring and summer months, the pineal gland slows its production of melatonin thus lifting the feelings of depression and heaviness from the body and mind.
Treatments
for SAD. There have
been numerous treatments tried
on SAD to include phototherapy,
increasing the time spent in the
sunlight during sunny, winter
days, and also antidepressant
drugs. The great thing
about SAD is that it’s
treatable. Unlike other
forms of depression which aren’t
linked to sunlight exposure SAD
patients are many times helped
with the use of bright lights
which imitate the sun’s rays.
Light
Therapy. Light therapy, also known as phototherapy, is actually the treatment of choice for SAD. The type of light used for SAD patients that has been shown to be most effective is intense fluorescent exposure measured at approximately 2500 lux (candle power) between one and three hours per day. Many therapists feel that the best time of the day to expose patients to the light is during the dawn hours. This gives the body the sensation of waking up along with the rising of the sun. The brain goes to work shutting down the production of melatonin and the patient wakes up less depressed than without the phototherapy.
Although the
specific treatment intensity,
duration and time is still under
research, there doesn’t seem to
be any doubt that phototherapy
for SAD patients is a very
viable method for decreasing
seasonal depression.
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