Post-holiday Blahs Might Be Seasonal Affective Disorder
1/14/2022
By Susan Rasmussen, FNP
The gifts are unwrapped, the holiday gatherings concluded, and several more cold weeks of winter remain. If hibernation has set in, it may be hard for you to find the motivation to get off the sofa and out from under that warm blanket. But, if your post-holiday blues won’t budge, you could have seasonal affective disorder (SAD), a condition that occurs during the winter months.
SAD is a disorder that affects between four and six percent of people in the United States – around 10 million Americans – and another 10 to 20 percent of the population may experience a milder form of winter blues. Many more Americans with SAD remain undiagnosed and untreated, according to health experts. SAD can affect anyone, but it is more common among women, people with a family history of SAD, and people who live in areas where winter days are short and there are significant changes in the amount of daylight between the seasons. SAD is most commonly diagnosed in people ages 15 to 55.
Symptoms of SAD include:
- Feeling sad, grumpy, moody, or anxious
- Loss of interest in activities usually enjoyed
- An increase in appetite, particularly a craving for starchy carbohydrates, such as bread and pasta
- Weight gain
- An increased need for sleep and feeling drowsy during the daytime
- Inability to concentrate
- Increased sensitivity to social rejection, and avoidance of social situations
Symptoms typically begin in September or October and end in April or May. Sometimes it’s difficult to distinguish whether you have a case of the winter doldrums, SAD or depression, because many of the symptoms are similar. The key difference is the time of year, length of time that you feel down, and the symptoms that accompany your “funk.”
The differences with SAD are that, unlike depression, symptoms come and go with the changing of the seasons. If your depressed mood lifts with the onset of spring and longer, light-filled days, you may have SAD, rather than depression. A major depressive disorder has the same emotional and physical symptoms as SAD, but the majority of these symptoms will persist for at least two weeks or more – often several months – and are not affected by the time of year or changing of seasons.
Conversely, depression is generally caused by a combination of genetic, biological, environmental, and psychological factors. It can also be triggered by trauma, loss of a loved one, a difficult relationship, or any stressful situation – but sometimes there is no apparent cause.
Health experts are unsure what causes SAD, but it is thought that the lack of sunlight during the shorter winter days disrupt the body’s sleep cycle, circadian rhythms – physical, mental and behavioral changes in the body that follow a 24-hour cycle, prompted by changes in light and darkness in the environment – and the brain’s production of a “feel-good” chemical known as serotonin that affects mood, and melatonin, which affects sleep patterns.
Treatment for SAD includes light therapy, exercise, medication, or counseling. Light therapy is simple, and involves sitting in front of a light box – no bigger than a hardback book – or wearing a light visor, for about half an hour or longer, usually in the morning. Other light therapy uses dawn simulation, with a dim light that turns on in the morning, activated by a timer, when you awaken and brightens over time, to mimic the sunrise. It’s believed that light therapy helps to re-set the brain's internal clock, restore the body’s sleep/wake cycle and regulate other daily rhythms – which in turn, relieve the depression-like symptoms of SAD.
If you can’t kick those feelings of post-holiday blahs, talk to your doctor. Help is available.
To schedule an appointment with Susan Rasmussen, FNP, or a primary care provider at Moberly Rural Health Clinic, visit moberlyphysicians.com or call (660) 263-9095.
About the Author: Susan Rasmussen has been a nurse since 1984 and a family nurse practitioner since 1994. Her career has included many areas of healthcare from OB to ER to training new nurses as an instructor at several nursing schools. Susan enjoys taking care of a wide variety of patients and has been thrilled to take care of entire families for several generations.
Remember that this information is not intended to replace the advice of your doctor, but rather to increase awareness and help equip patients with information and facilitate conversations with your primary care provider that will benefit your health.
Sources: National Institutes of Mental Health, www.nimh.nih.gov; American Academy of Family Physicians, www.familydoctor.org, WebMD
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