SAD INFORMATION SHEET S.A.D. Seasonal Affective Disorder Seasonal - changes with the seasons Affective - the way you display yourself to other people, the sort of face you put on Disorder - needs fixing Winter Depression The Winter Blues WHAT IS SAD? SAD stands for Seasonal Affective Disorder. Animals react to the changing season with changes in mood and behaviour and human beings are no exception. Most people find they eat and sleep slightly more in winter and dislike the dark mornings and short days. For some, however, symptoms are severe enough to disrupt their lives and to cause considerable distress. These people are suffering from SAD. HOW DOES IT AFFECT PEOPLE? Sufferers have to endure most of the following: Sleep Problems - oversleeping but not refreshed, cannot out of bed, needing a nap in the afternoon Overeating - carbohydrate craving leading to overweight Depression - despair, misery, guilt, anxiety, normal tasks become frustratingly difficult, hopelessness Family problems - avoiding company, irritability, loss of libido, loss of feeling Lethargy - too tired to cope, everything an effort Physical Symptoms - often joint pain or stomach problems, lowered resistance to infection Behavioural problems - especially in young people The symptoms tend to start from around September each year, lasting until April but are at their worst in the darkest months. WHO DOES IT AFFECT? The standard figure says that around 2% of people in Northern Europe suffer badly, with many more (10%) putting up with milder symptoms (sub-syndromal SAD or the winter blues). Across the world the incidence increases with distance from the equator, except where there is snow on the ground when it becomes less common. More women than men are diagnosed as having SAD. Children and adolescents are also vulnerable. WHAT CAUSES IT? The problem stems from the lack of bright light in winter. Researchers have proved that bright light makes a difference to the brain chemistry, although the exact means by which sufferers are affected is not yet known. It is not a psychosomatic or imaginary illness. Certainly bright light will suppress the production of the hormone Melatonin by the Pineal Gland in the brain. It now seems likely that bright light also improves the levels of the neurotransmitter Serotonin (5HT). Very recently (September 1995) some researchers have started to produce evidence that SAD sufferers have low levels of Serotonin in Winter. (No-one has found a way of sampling these substances in the brain for obvious reasons, so the researchers have to rely on inference and deduction for much of their work; however various clever placebo controlled trials have been devised, which taken with the obvious, and often dramatic effectiveness of treatment has satisfied anyone who has taken a close look that this is a real phenomenon.) Melatonin taken orally has the effect of making you drowsy. Serotonin in effect transmits the signals from one nerve ending in the brain to the next; Serotonin is the substance affected by the new SSRI drugs (Prozac etc etc) These substances and organs are connected to the "body clock" an area of the brain which regulates sleeping, eating and many other functions which vary on a daily rhythm, and some researchers believe that one aspect of the problem is explained by the sufferer's body clock losing regulation and drifting "out of sync". WHAT TREATMENT IS THERE? As the cause is lack of bright light, the treatment is to be in bright light every day by using a light box or a similar bright light therapy device. (Going to a brightly-lit climate, whether skiing or somewhere hot, is indeed a cure). The preferred level of light is about as bright as a spring morning on a clear day and for most people sitting in front of a light box, allowing the light to reach the eyes, for between ? and ? hour daily will be sufficient to alleviate the symptoms. The user does not have to stare at the light, but can watch TV or read or similar, just allowing the light to reach the eyes. For some people a "dawn simulator" (a light which comes on gently in the morning, mimicking a natural sunrise) is a suitable (and certainly a very civilised) solution. Drug treatments using an SSRI drug are often helpful. Alternative anti-depressant drugs are not advised. Finding the correct dose can take some time and persistence is often called for. IS THERE ANYTHING SPECIAL ABOUT THE LIGHT? The light must be suitably bright. At least 2500lux (lux is the technical measure of brightness) is needed, which is 5 times brighter than a well lit office (a normal living room might be as low as 100lux); brighter lights up to 10,000lux (about as bright as an early spring morning) work quicker. 2500lux is approximately the level of light needed to take a photograph without using a flash (with an ordinary low cost camera and film). Contrary to the old belief the light does not need to be special daylight, colour matching or 'full spectrum' light; simply changing the lamps in a room to these special types will not produce sufficient light. SHOULD I TALK TO MY DOCTOR? Of course. There are a number of specialist NHS clinics in the UK, less in other European territories. North America has many therapists with experience; members of SLTBR (Society for Light Treatment and Biorhythms Research) are likely to have most knowledge. Steve Hayes 100341.3413@compuserve.com further information http://www.outsidein.co.uk/bodyclock http://nyx10.ss.du.edu:8001/~lpuls/sadhome.html