Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) in the Summer? Sunshine depression rare, but real!
By Ralph Kratzer
As hot weather approaches, those with summer SAD sleep less, eat less, and lose weight. They are extremely irritable and agitated. (It is the reverse for people with winter SAD, who sleep more, gain weight and crave high-carb foods, and tend to slow down and socially hibernate from late fall to early spring.)
In its most severe form, people with summer seasonal depression may be more at risk for suicide than cold-weather SAD, says Dr. Norman Rosenthal, a clinical professor of psychiatry at Georgetown University Medical School, who has studied both types and first helped discover their existence. “Suicide is more of a concern when people are depressed and agitated rather than depressed and lethargic,” he explains.
A person with summer SAD can stay inside, crank up the AC, and darken the room but then go outside into the heat and it is as if they have never been treated, explains Rosenthal, the author of the book “Winter Blues.”
Another idea is that it might be the light itself that is aggravating sufferers, whether it is the intensity of sunlight or the angle it’s coming at people. One of Rosenthal’s summer depression patients describes it as “feeling like the light is cutting through me like a knife.”
Lewy suspects the cause in a second group might be that the body’s natural clock, its circadian rhythms, are misaligning in summer. Instead of cueing to dawn, the longer daylight is causing some vulnerable people to cue to dusk. Cueing to dusk shortens the typical body clock and delays a person’s sleep-wake cycle. This mismatch, theorizes Lewy, may be triggering depression.
Do you secretly – or perhaps not-so-secretly – loathe the summer months? Maybe you belong to the 1 percent with summer SAD…
Source: NBC News Health

