| Day Light
Bright Light Therapy System promotes health and
wellness. Clinically tested and recommended by experts for: SAD and
winter blues, jet lag, shift work adjustment and
Circadian Sleep Disorders.
Day Light is safe,
effective, affordable and easy to use. This 10,000 lux (light
illumination) bright light system is used by many people to help ease
their seasonal mood swings, sometimes referred to as SAD, and to regulate
body rhythms.
It's easy! Simply sit 12 inches or so
away from the light, while reading, using your computer, watching
television. eating, for approximately 20-30 per day. Breakfast
is a great time to schedule your light therapy
everyday.
Bright Light
Benefits:
SAD – or Seasonal Affective
Disorder is a full-blown, debilitating, mood disorder, but
it is predictable for half the year, at the same time of the year.
If you start feeling lethargic during the fall, have
trouble waking up and getting out of bed, start wanting heavy or carbohydrate rich
foods, it’s a sign that winter doldrums may be setting in. The mood
disorder itself usually sets in weeks later – with chronic low mood,
inability to do work, loss of pleasure in usual activities, etc. – and is
worst in January and February. Usually, everything is fine again by early
May. Winter Blues The
millions of people suffering from full-blown, clinical SAD are just the
tip of the iceberg. Somewhere toward the bottom are people who are just
dragging, not getting their work done, and generally feeling unhappy.
These people may be more inclined to say that the wintertime fatigue is
more prominent than a change in mood. Carbohydrate cravings are also
common.
The time course is the same, though, usually starting
in mid- to late fall and resolving by early May. Importantly, people may
experience the blues some years, and full Seasonal Affective Disorder
other years. This may be due to differences in the weather pattern, but
also to current life stresses. If you’re having trouble with employment or
family, it’s more likely you’ll develop a major mood disorder that year.
Non-Seasonal Mood Disorders
There are many varieties of clinical mood disorders. Even with
SAD, some people experience a “unipolar” pattern (winters low, summers
normal) while others experience a “bipolar pattern” (winters low, summers
high). The same is true for non-seasonal mood disorders, except the low
periods are less predictable and can occur at any time of year. In another
form, the depressed mood can last continuously, literally for years at a
time without let-up. Regardless of the pattern, all mood disorders should
be evaluated and treated by a mental health professional – although, if
you’re lucky, your primary care physician can also be helpful.
The good news is that patients with non-seasonal mood
disorders, of all variations, are showing good response to light therapy.
Often it is combined with antidepressant drugs, but not necessarily. Those
with the bipolar pattern are only given lights after establishing a
mood-stabilizing medication (such as lithium) to avoid manic swings.
You can evaluate whether your blue mood is seasonal or
non-seasonal, and whether it is clinically severe or not, using the
Personalized Inventory SAD at www.cet.org . If the
problem looks serious, print out the results and show them to your doctor:
it’s a great way to get a discussion going and move toward supervised
treatment.
Circadian Sleep
Disorders Can’t fall asleep till very, very late –
then can’t wake up in time for a normal workday? Possibly, you are
suffering from Delayed Sleep Phase Syndrome (DSPS), which tends to be a
lifetime problem and often occurs in family lines. Other people can fall
into a DSPS trap for several years (teenage and college years are prime
examples), but then come out of it. Often DSPS is accompanied by daytime
fatigue and a blue mood, but not necessarily. Sleep itself is normal – it
just occurs much too late. A major factor in DSPS – like for SAD – is a
deficiency in morning light exposure. And, like for SAD, morning light
therapy can be corrective.
Weight Loss
Everyone knows there are no magic formulas for weight loss, yet it is
major burden for so many people. Weight gain often accompanies mood
disorders, and it is often a winter problem even without the blue mood.
Even binge eating disorder and bulimia nervosa, psychiatric conditions
that can be distinguished from mood disorders, often become worse in
winter. Often, winter appetite turns to carbohydrate rich foods, which combined
with lower activity levels constitutes a formula for weight gain.
People with SAD, who are gaining anywhere
from 5 to 30 pounds each winter (and losing all or most of it each
summer), find that light therapy reduces their carbohydrate cravings and help.
Even patients with winter worsening of bulimia have been able to cut their
binge eating by as much as half, using light therapy. In SAD, the
turnaround in food cravings and weight gain is slower than the turnaround
in mood – it may take several weeks so see a difference – but it
works.
The experts do
not know whether light therapy can assist with non-seasonal
weight loss.
|