Author:
Wirz-Justice A.,Kräuchi K.,Brunner D.P.,Graw P.,Haug H.-J.,Leonhardt G.,Sarrafzadeh A.,English J.,Arendt J.
Abstract
Seasonal affective disorder (SAD) is characterised by recurrent episodes in autumn and winter of depression, hypersomnia, augmented appetite with carbohydrate craving, and weight gain, and can be successfully treated with bright light. Circadian rhythm hypotheses (summarized in) have stimulated research into the pathophysiology of SAD, postulating that:1.The illness is a consequence of delayed phase position,2.It is correlated with diminished circadian amplitude, or3.It results from changes in the nocturnal duration between dusk and dawn e.g. of low core body temperature or melatonin secretion. Light is considered to act directly on the circadian pacemaker (‘Process C’) and not on sleep dependent processes (‘Process S’). Thus successful treatment of SAD must act via mechanisms within known retinohypothalamic pathways. Conversely, emergence of SAD symptoms may reflect inappropriate neurobiological response to decreasing daylength.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Biological Psychiatry,Psychiatry and Mental health
Reference13 articles.
1. Circadian rhythms of mood under a constant routine;Haug;Neuropsychopharmacology,1994
2. Testing circadian rhythm hypotheses of winter depression in the constant routine protocol;Wirz-Justice;Neuropsychopharmacology,1994
3. Endogenous circadian rhythm of subjective modd in healthy young men;Boivin;Society for Research on Biological Rhythms,1994
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