Title of article :
Circadian temperature and cortisol rhythms during a constant routine are phase-delayed in hypersomnic winter depression
Author/Authors :
David H. Avery، نويسنده , , Kitty Dahl، نويسنده , , Margaret V. Savage، نويسنده , , George L. Brengelmann، نويسنده , , Larry H. Larsen، نويسنده , , Margaret A. Kenny، نويسنده , , Derek N. Eder، نويسنده , , Michael V. Vitiello، نويسنده , , Patricia N. Prinz، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Abstract :
Circadian temperature, cortisol, and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) rhythms during a constant routine were assessed in 6 female controls and 6 female patients with hypersomnic winter depression (seasonal affective disorder, SAD) before and after morning bright light treatment. After sleep was standardized for 6 days, the subjects were sleep-deprived and at bed rest for 27 hours while rectal temperature, cortisol, and TSH levels were assessed. The minimum of the fitted rectal temperature rhythm was phase-delayed in the SAD group compared to the controls 5:42 AM vs. 3:16 AM (p< .005); with bright light treatment, the minimum advanced from 5:42 AM to 3:36 AM(p = .06). The minimum of the cortisol rhythm was phase-delayed in the SAD group compared to the control group, 12:11 AM vs. 11:03 PM (p< .05); with bright light treatment, the minimum advanced from 12:11 AM to 11:38 PM (p = .06). The acrophase of the TSH rhythm was not significantly phase-delayed in SAD subjects compared to control, though the trend appeared to be toward a phase-delay (p = .07). After bright light therapy, the TSH acrophase was not significantly different in the SAD subjects; the trend was a phase-advance (p = .09). Overall, the data suggest that circadian rhythms are phase-delayed relative to sleep in SAD patients and that morning bright light phase-advances those rhythms.
Keywords :
Seasonal affective disorder. depression. circadian. temperature. Cortisol
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry