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Pastimes : SAD[Seasonal Affect Disorder]

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To: zeta1961 who wrote (3)8/26/2006 8:43:21 PM
From: zeta1961   of 18
 
Mood Brighteners: Light therapy gets nod as depression buster
Bruce Bower

Science News Online
Week of April 23, 2005; Vol. 167, No. 17


A new scientific era may have dawned for light therapy, a potential depression fighter that has languished in the shadows of antidepressant medication and psychotherapy for the past 20 years.

A research review commissioned by the American Psychiatric Association in Washington, D.C., concludes that in trials, daily exposure to bright light is about as effective as antidepressant drugs in quelling seasonal affective disorder (SAD), or winter depression, and other forms of depression.

"I now tell my patients that light therapy is a reasonable depression treatment, even if the data base for this approach is relatively small," says psychiatrist Robert N. Golden of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Golden directed the new statistical review, which appears in the April American Journal of Psychiatry.

Like many mainstream psychiatrists, Golden had been skeptical of studies reporting that depression diminishes in response to daily bright-light exposure, usually administered early in the morning for 30 minutes to 1 hour. These investigations often contain serious flaws, he says, such as few participants and no groups treated with dim lights or other placebos.

The new review supported Golden's skepticism about research quality. Of 173 published light-treatment studies that his team considered, only 20 passed muster on their design and controls. Those tests lasted between 1 week and 6 weeks and typically included about 20 participants. But to Golden's surprise, pooled data from the acceptable investigations showed markedly eased SAD symptoms from both bright-light exposure after awakening and dawn simulation, in which a light box each morning provides a sleeping person with gradually intensifying illumination.

Moreover, light therapy yielded substantial relief for outpatients with mild-to-moderate depression unrelated to any season. Such therapy also magnified the depression-fighting effects of antidepressants in these individuals.

Questions remain about light therapy, Golden notes. It hasn't been studied with patients hospitalized for severe depression.

Researchers also need to examine whether specific light doses can cause or aggravate eye problems such as cataracts, Golden adds. "That's a concern, but I have no reason to think that light therapy is dangerous," he says.

Research conducted too recently to be included in Golden's review confirms that light therapy can effectively treat mood disorders, says psychologist Michael Terman of Columbia University. Terman and other researchers studying treatments based on biological rhythms describe their findings in an upcoming Psychological Medicine.

They report that a night of sleep deprivation, like light therapy, is a quick-acting antidepressive. In some tests, nearly two-thirds of people with major depression feel much better within hours of staying awake for a whole night or even for just the second half of a night, Terman and his colleagues say.

Other investigations suggest that a night of sleep deprivation and a gradual return to a full night's sleep over the next week, combined with daily bright-light exposures, speeds recovery in people receiving antidepressants for major depression or bipolar depression.

To reap maximum long-term benefits, notes psychiatrist David Avery of the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle, depressed people receiving light therapy need to sleep on a regular schedule, thus steadying their biological clocks.

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Letters:

In this article, the use of light therapy was shown to fight depression. I would suggest consideration of the possibility that the light therapy also increased the levels of vitamin D in these patients.

Patrick Albright
Cresson, Pa.

A review published last year by the Cochrane Library also found evidence that bright-light treatment is effective against depression. The review indicated that light treatment might be useful even for patients with serious nonseasonal depression.

Daniel F. Kripke
University of California, San Diego

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If you have a comment on this article that you would like considered for publication in Science News, send it to editors@sciencenews.org. Please include your name and location.

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References:

Golden, R.N., et al. 2005. The efficacy of light therapy in the treatment of mood disorders: A review and meta-analysis of the evidence. American Journal of Psychiatry 162(April):656-662. Abstract available at ajp.psychiatryonline.org.

Wirz-Justice, A. . . . M. Terman, et al. In press. Chronotherapeutics (light and wake therapy) in affective disorders. Psychological Medicine. Abstract.

Further Readings:

A version of this article written for younger readers is available at Science News for Kids.

Sources:

David Avery
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
University of Washington
325 9th Avenue, Box 359896
Seattle, WA 98104

Robert N. Golden
Department of Psychiatry
Campus Box 7160
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7160

Michael Terman
Department of Psychiatry
Columbia University
1051 Riverside Drive, Unit 50
New York, NY 10032


sciencenews.org

From Science News, Vol. 167, No. 17, April 23, 2005, p. 261.

Copyright (c) 2005 Science Service. All rights reserved.
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