Light Therapy to Retrain the Brain
- Morning light controls the body's melatonin production, which affects the body's circadian rhythm or sleep/wake cycle.
- Twenty-five percent of people living at 38 degrees north latitude and higher, which includes the northernmost parts of California, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, West Virginia, Virginia and Maryland (and all U.S. states north of them), have symptoms in fall and winter related to the later sunrise. Symptoms can include weight gain, fatigue, intense carbohydrate craving, difficulty waking on time and depression. These symptoms are collectively known as seasonal affective disorder or SAD.
- SAD light treatment early in the morning provides the signal the circadian system is seeking. It alters the body's secretion of melatonin. The result is a more normal sleep-wake cycle and abatement of symptoms.
- In 2005 an American Psychiatric Association work group agreed that light is a first-line treatment of choice for both seasonal and nonseasonal depression. Fifty to 80 percent of people with SAD get relief from light treatment.
- Shift workers and those with jet lag also benefit from light therapy. It trains your brain and internal clock to get in sync with local time. People who fall asleep and wake too early or too late can also benefit.
Light and Melatonin
Symptoms of Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)
Light Treatment Retrains the Brain
Light Treatment is Effective
Light Treatment Scenarios
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