Seasonal Affective Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Gender Differences in the Effects of Season on Patterns of Nocturnal Melatonin Secretion in Healthy Volunteers and Patients With Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)
As the seasons change during the course of the year, many animals show major changes in
their behavior and physiology. Many of these changes are triggered by changes in the length
of time each night that the pineal gland produces the hormone melatonin. Melatonin is
produced for a longer time in winter when nights are long, than in summer when nights are
short.
Some researchers believe that melatonin may play a similar role in how season effects mood
of patients with seasonal affective disorder. Seasonal affective disorder (SAD) or mood
disorder with seasonal pattern is a condition where the normal biorhythm is disturbed during
a season, especially autumn-winter. Patients may begin experiencing or experience worsening
of depressive symptoms. Patients complain of being constantly tired, craving sugary foods,
overeating, and over sleeping.
Researchers have collected some preliminary data showing that the duration of nighttime
melatonin secretion increases in winter and decreases in summer in healthy women, but not in
healthy men. However, men diagnosed with SAD have shown longer duration of melatonin
secretion in the winter, similar to the duration seen in healthy women. If these early
findings are confirmed it may explain why SAD is more common in women than in men.
The purpose of this study is to continue researching the differences in melatonin secretion
over the seasons in healthy men and women, and to determine how these findings may apply to
patients with SAD.
Changes in the duration of nocturnal melatonin secretion that are induced by seasonal changes in the length of the night trigger many of the dramatic seasonal changes in behavior that occur in animals. It has been hypothesized that melatonin plays a similar role as chemical mediator of the effects of season on mood in patients with seasonal affective disorder (SAD). For such a hypothesis to be tenable, it would be necessary to show that duration of nocturnal melatonin secretion changes on a seasonal basis in patients with SAD. We have preliminary evidence that the duration (and amplitude) of nocturnal melatonin secretion increases in winter and decreases in summer in healthy women, but not in healthy men. This gender difference, if confirmed, might explain why SAD is more prevalent in women than men. Interestingly, all of five men with SAD that we have studied to date exhibited lengthening of melatonin secretion in winter, as occurs in healthy women. However, the response of women with SAD is less consistent. The purpose of the present protocol is to extend and confirm our finding of gender differences in the response of melatonin secretion to change of season in healthy individuals, and to determine whether and to what extent this response occurs in patients with SAD. ;
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