SLEEP IN FALL WINTER SEASONAL AFFECTIVE-DISORDER - EFFECTS OF LIGHT AND CHANGING SEASONS

被引:62
作者
ANDERSON, JL
ROSEN, LN
MENDELSON, WB
JACOBSEN, FM
SKWERER, RG
JOSEPHVANDERPOOL, JR
DUNCAN, CC
WEHR, TA
ROSENTHAL, NE
机构
[1] NIMH, CLIN PSYCHOBIOL BRANCH,OUTPATIENT STUDIES UNIT, BLDG 10-45-239,9000 ROCKVILLE PIKE, BETHESDA, MD 20892 USA
[2] BRIGHAM & WOMENS HOSP, BOSTON, MA 02115 USA
[3] HARVARD UNIV, SCH MED, BOSTON, MA 02115 USA
[4] UNIFORMED SERV UNIV HLTH SCI, BETHESDA, MD 20814 USA
[5] SUNY STONY BROOK, STONY BROOK, NY 11794 USA
[6] TRANSCULTURAL MENTAL HLTH INST, WASHINGTON, DC USA
[7] SARASOTA PALMS HOSP, SARASOTA, FL USA
关键词
SEASONAL AFFECTIVE DISORDER; DEPRESSION; SLEEP; PHOTOTHERAPY; HYPERSOMNIA;
D O I
10.1016/0022-3999(94)90037-X
中图分类号
R749 [精神病学];
学科分类号
100205 ;
摘要
Disturbances of sleep are a hallmark of seasonal affective disorders (SAD), as they are of other mood disorders. Fall/winter SAD patients most often report hypersomnia. Among responses of 293 SAD patients on a symptom questionnaire, complaints of winter hypersomnia (80%) greatly exceeded insomnia (10%), hypersomnia plus insomnia (5%), or no sleep difficulty (5%). Increased sleep length in fall/winter is not unique to SAD. Among 1571 individuals across four latitudes surveyed at random from the general population, winter sleep increases of less-than-or-equal-to 2 hr/day relative to summer were reported by nearly half. However, hypersomnia had a low correlation (r = 0.29) with the total number of other SAD symptoms that were reported in this sample. Ten SAD patients kept daily sleep logs across 1 yr that showed increases in fall and winter (sleeping most in October; least in May) whose maximum averaged 2.7 hr per day more weekend sleep than in spring and summer. These winter increases might have been somewhat attenuated since most received light therapy during part of the winter. Nocturnal EEG recordings of depressed SAD patients in winter showed decreased sleep efficiency, decreased delta sleep percentage, and increased REM density (but normal REM latency) in comparison with recordings: (1) from themselves in summer; (2) from themselves after greater-than-or-equal-to 9 days of light therapy; or (3) from age- and gender-matched healthy controls. Thus, the extent of fall/winter oversleeping recorded by our SAD patients did not differ dramatically from that reported by the general population, but sleep complaints of our SAD patients have been accompanied by features of sleep architecture that are different from healthy controls and are reversed by summer or by bright-light therapy.
引用
收藏
页码:323 / 337
页数:15
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