The Body's Acceptance of Bright Light
Therapy
More than 15 medical agencies doing research on Bright Light
Therapy have shown success with light therapy in patients, with
improvement in about a week or so. Bright Light Therapy has shown
the medical fields that therapeutic levels of illumination have now
recognized physiological effects on the human body.
According to blood tests the hormone melatonin, known to be
exceptionally high at certain times of the day, are rapidly reduced
by levels of light exposure. This has demonstrated that Bright
Light Therapy affects the daily rhythms of body temperature,
hormone secretion, and sleep patterns. To sum it up, it
refers to a treatment used for individuals who suffer from
circadian rhythm sleep disorders, with a normal circadian referring
to a cycle of approximately 24 hours which makes one feel sleepy or
alert at daily regular times. A circadian rhythm sleep disorder
causes this natural sleep patter to overlap into a person's regular
awake activities--work or school.
Where all of this originates from is because scientifically, the
body's clock is located in the body's brain, is a junction where
the nerves travel to the eyes called the SCN. It is this clock that
controls the "circadian rhythms" of the body, in turn controlling
the body rhythms.
Bright Light Therapy when balancing the body's rhythms sets the
internal clock by its exposure to bright light, similar to
sunlight. A goal for combination therapy includes a healthy sleep
pattern and an internal clock that works at the right time. The
purpose of the Bright Light Therapy is to reset the body's clock
that is not working, but is considered only part of the treatment
plan. The other part of the treatment plan is to include a doctor
who knows what he or she is doing and specializes in sleep
disorders. At this time, there are four basic groups of products
for light therapy:
1. The Light Box
2. The Desk Lamp
3. The Light Visor
4. The Dawn Simulator
Another disorder that Bright Light Therapy is good for is the
depressive phase of bipolar. Women with bipolar disorder were
examined by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh School of
Medicine's Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic. Previously the
women had used Bright Light Therapy treatments in the morning or at
midday on a daily basis for 15 minutes, 30 minutes, and 45 minutes
for a period of two weeks. Six of the women had significant
improvement, with several recovering 100% from the symptoms of the
bipolar depression. The ones with the highest rates of success were
in the midday light range, with a few responding to the early
morning light.
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