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Bright-light therapy in the treatment of mood disorders.

Neuropsychobiology
January 1, 2011
Gerald Pail et al. (7 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to review the literature on bright-light therapy (BLT) to assess its efficacy, safety, and mechanisms of action in treating mood disorders, particularly seasonal affective disorder (SAD) and non-seasonal depression.

Results Summary

The study found that BLT is effective for SAD and shows promise for other mood disorders, including chronic depression, antepartum depression, and bipolar depression, with evidence supporting its role in regulating circadian rhythms via the suprachiasmatic nucleus and indolamines like melatonin and serotonin.

Population

Patients with seasonal affective disorder (SAD), chronic depression, antepartum depression, premenstrual depression, bipolar depression, and sleep-wake cycle disturbances.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (7)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
Bright-light therapy (BLT)
neutral
seasonal affective disorder/winter type (SAD)
-
-
is established as the treatment of choice
#1
Bright-light therapy (BLT)
neutral
chronic depression
-
-
has evidence for efficacy
#2
Bright-light therapy (BLT)
neutral
antepartum depression
-
-
has evidence for efficacy
#3
Bright-light therapy (BLT)
neutral
premenstrual depression
-
-
has evidence for efficacy
#4
Bright-light therapy (BLT)
neutral
bipolar depression
-
-
has evidence for efficacy
#5
Bright-light therapy (BLT)
neutral
disturbances of the sleep-wake cycle
-
-
has evidence for efficacy
#6
Bright-light therapy (BLT)
neutral
non-seasonal depression
-
-
data on the usefulness are promising
#7
Abstract

Bright-light therapy (BLT) is established as the treatment of choice for seasonal affective disorder/winter type (SAD). In the last two decades, the use of BLT has expanded beyond SAD: there is evidence for efficacy in chronic depression, antepartum depression, premenstrual depression, bipolar depression and disturbances of the sleep-wake cycle. Data on the usefulness of BLT in non-seasonal depression are promising; however, further systematic studies are still warranted. In this review, the authors present a comprehensive overview of the literature on BLT in mood disorders. The first part elucidates the neurobiology of circadian and seasonal adaptive mechanisms focusing on the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), the indolamines melatonin and serotonin, and the chronobiology of mood disorders. The SCN is the primary oscillator in humans. Indolamines are known to transduce light signals into cells and organisms since early in evolution, and their role in signalling change of season is still preserved in humans: melatonin is synthesized primarily in the pineal gland and is the central hormone for internal clock circuitries. The melatonin precursor serotonin is known to modulate many behaviours that vary with season. The second part discusses the pathophysiology and clinical specifiers of SAD, which can be seen as a model disorder for chronobiological disturbances and the mechanism of action of BLT. In the third part, the mode of action, application, efficacy, tolerability and safety of BLT in SAD and other mood disorders are explored.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Chronobiology DisordersCircadian RhythmHumansMelatoninMood DisordersPhototherapySeasonal Affective DisorderSerotoninSuprachiasmatic Nucleus
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety85
Efficacy80/10
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations177
Citations/Year12.6
Relative Citation Ratio5.93
NIH Percentile94.7%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score1.49
Normalized Score0.81
Related Supplements
Bright-light therapy in the treatment of mood disorders. | Panacea Index