Showing posts with label light therapy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label light therapy. Show all posts

13 August 2015

SLEEP STUFF: Light therapy


It may not occur to some people with sleep problems that light might be both their problem and their solution. Controlling light exposure at key times during the day is important for keeping fixed to normal circadian rhythms.

The people who often struggle most with finding quality sleep are also the ones working night shift or who stay up too late while on their computers. Their exposures to artificial light at these hours makes sleep harder to achieve due to the way that the eyes and skin absorb light; this absorption can literally turn off your brain's melatonin production. It's melatonin that helps the body transition from wakefulness to sleep.

On the flip side, people who are sleepy during the day often live in climates where the fall and winter bring longer periods of darkness during the day. Less exposure to quality light (natural or artificial) first thing in the morning can lead to daytime sleepiness as well as mood changes.

There are a few different products on the market geared to help people gain some better control over their light exposure. As always, discuss these options with your physician. In some cases, they might even be able to prescribe light therapy, if it's warranted, and insurance may then cover some or all of the expense.

Neuro:On Mask with Circadian Lighting
This is a wearable sleep mask that uses a "smart wakeup" technology to help you fall asleep and to wake you up at the optimal time in the morning, usually after you have completed your last REM cycle and have moved into a lighter stage of sleep. It measures several biological signals like brain waves, muscle tension, eye movements, pulse, core temperature and more via Bluetooth 4.0 LE-compliant digital analysis. For those who struggle with an irregular sleep schedule, general restlessness and jet lag, the NeuroOn might be a useful solution. It runs about $300. Learn more

FeelBrightLight Visor
You might have seen these before: visors that have lights built underneath their brims. These lights shine specific kinds of colored light indirectly above the eyes to help improve energy and mood. They offer a device you can clip to any visor you already have for around $110 and a deluxe version that includes a carrying case and a visor for $150. This could be a good option for people who need to move about and desire a hands-free solution to daytime sleepiness. Learn more

Philips Wake-Up Light
This attractive round light props up on a table, desk or nightstand nearby and can be used to help you fall asleep or wake up more gently depending upon how you program it. Its chief job is to stimulate sunrise and sunset lighting. Dimmer light at night is better for achieving sleep onset, while gradual illumination to morning sunlight aids in waking. This device also includes an option so you can awaken to pleasing natural sounds. Priced between $70 and $170, depending upon features. Learn more

Re-Timer 
Here's another wearable light therapy device, worn like a pair of lightweight and nonrestrictive goggles, that uses green spectrum light. It is designed to fit the majority of the population ("one size fits most") and its manufacturers claim it can bring relief to users in as little as three days following specific therapy protocols. It is used by people with delayed sleep phase syndrome (night owls who need to shift their sleep phases earlier), people with advanced sleep phase syndrome (morning larks who need to shift their sleep phases later), shiftworkers and those suffering from chronic jet lag. Prices run around $300. Learn more


29 June 2015

JULY is Sleep Products Month at SleepyHeadCENTRAL--Introducing SLEEP STUFF

There's a burgeoning market for sleep products that can't be ignored, so SleepyHeadCENTRAL is spending July calling attention to some items that have recently captured attention. SHC will discuss seven categories of products this month, including the following:

  • Anti-snoring devices
  • Smartphone apps
  • CPAP maintenance products
  • Nightstand items
  • Light therapy
  • Wearable technology
  • Books on sleep

READERS
Please note that SHC does not have the capacity or ability to "road test" many consumer products. Product highlights, examinations or reviews posted at SHC are for consumer education only; when products have not been tested, they are primarily mentioned as possible options for some readers.

You, as the consumer, are ultimately responsible for your own buying decisions, and SHC encourages consumers to research sleep health products thoroughly and independently. Because the market for these kinds of products is so spectacularly wide, SHC's aim is to show readers that there are many options out there. Your best move as a consumer is to make the most informed choice for your particular situation.

If readers want to learn more about a specific sleep health product, and SHC has not yet examined that product, they are invited to leave SHC a message at sleepyheadcentral@gmail.com and SHC will add these requests to its growing list of consumer options to review in a future post at SHC. Thanks!

Including product highlights, examinations and reviews on the SHC site prompts some important legal language to be shared here to protect SHC and its readers. Please note the following disclosures and disclaimers below. They are applicable not only to SHC and its agents, but to all others participating independently in discussions about these products on the SHC site, which may include patients and healthcare professionals.
  • SHC does not, as of the date and time of this post, have any longstanding or preexisting relationships with any product manufacturers.
  • The process of selecting products for highlighting, examination or review in posts at SHC is random and driven by SHC's own curiosity and exposure to new items as seen on the Internet, at trade shows, at conferences and at other incidental events.
  • SHC will always report how or whether they received any product, if it is highlighted, examined or reviewed at the site.
  • A future highlight, examination or review of any product on SHC constitutes no special relationship between SHC and any product manufacturer. SHC simply decided to write about it.
  • SHC reserves the right to post both positive and negative reviews of any given product, but only if these products have actually been tested by SHC.
  • If SHC receives free products or free meals or gifts from product manufacturer representatives, that does not mean SHC will write and post highlights, examinations or reviews about these products, nor does it imply any endorsement of these products from SHC either in the digital world or the real world.
  • If SHC receives material compensation (products, cash, gifts, meals) after highlighting, examining or reviewing a product independently, SHC will report this new affiliation to readers.
  • Sometimes SHC receives free items in the mail; sometimes SHC asks for samples. SHC will let readers know in either case.
PRODUCT MANUFACTURERS
If you have a product you would like SHC to learn more about, you may send your product with all manufacturing and usage information to SHC at the address below. This does not guarantee SHC will use, examine, review or highlight your product in the future. But if you really think it's something that SHC readers could benefit from, feel free to send it along, and SHC will take a look. Products given freely to SHC will never be resold, but they may be given away freely to third parties, including readers, sleep health professionals or family members of friends for the purposes of testing or examining. This form of sharing does not imply endorsement of these products by SHC. 

SleepyHeadCENTRAL
321 High School Road NE
PMB 204, Ste. D-3
Bainbridge Island, WA 98110



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SleepyHeadCENTRAL strongly encourages people with ongoing sleep health problems to approach a medical professional to determine appropriate differential diagnoses and treatment. This post, like all other posts on SHC, is not intended to substitute for medical advice.  

23 February 2015

Alternatives: What is light therapy and how can light actually help improve sleep?

"Vietnam Lagoon at Dawn," Public Domain Image.
It seems counterintuitive that exposing oneself to bright light could actually help someone sleep better. However, a quick review of the biological processes which lead to sleep may clarify how light has a relationship to sleep.

The sleep process itself is informed by two separate biological functions:

  • Sleep-Wake Drive: This is the process that is part of our homeostatic drive. It relates to the daily rise and fall in our neurochemical makeup which informs us when we are tired or ready to wake up. The sleep-wake drive is regulated by the part of the brain which also regulates our other drives: sex, thirst, hunger, etc. When you have enough sleep, your sleep drive wanes and your wakefulness drive kicks in, and vice versa. 
  • Circadian Rhythms: These are biological rhythms built not only inside our brains but in specific organs and even within our cells. They are informed by our exposure to certain cues in our environment, especially light. Our bodies, like all living things, are "entrained" to the light-dark cycles of the earth and so our sleep cycles are equally informed by the rising and setting of the sun. It is the circadian clock inside the pineal gland which produces melatonin as the light of the day wanes. Melatonin serves to prepare the body and brain for sleep. With enough light exposure during the evening, the pineal gland will sense the light and stop producing melatonin, thus halting the drive to sleep.
Together, these two mechanisms regulate our sleeping patterns. When such patterns fall out of "entrainment," it results in a dysfunction of sleep phasing. This leads to either falling asleep later and sleeping in, which can be impractical or problematic for many, or falling asleep too early and waking too early, which can also be problematic.

Some people do not have consistent sleep cycles at all because of circadian rhythm dysfunction; their sleep-wake drives kick in at extremely impractical times (like 3pm for bedtime and 1am for rise time), making life very hard for them if they need to attend classes, hold a job or make appointments. And to make matters worse, some people have sleep cycles that continuously shift, meaning they can't guess just when their body will demand sleep.

Light therapy, also known as phototherapy or heliotherapy, serves those with problematic shifting in their sleep schedules. Intentional exposure to specific kinds of light--lamps, photo boxes, even wearable technology--for a certain amount of time and, often, at a very specific time of day, can help "re-entrain" that person's rhythms so they more closely mimic the sleep patterns they want.

An example: A person who struggles with late-afternoon sleepiness and finds it challenging to stay up past 6pm may try using exposure to light to delay early melatonin production in the brain and "reset" their circadian rhythms over a period of time until they become "re-entrained" to a more normal sleeping pattern.

Another example: A person who struggles with insomnia may try avoiding all exposure to bright and/or blue spectrum light (which is emitted by all electronic devices with a screen, including pads, phones, handheld game, computers, laptops, and TVs) after the sun goes down in order to encourage more melatonin production. Then, they try to sleep and set their alarm for a reasonable morning rise time and, upon waking at the sound of the alarm, they can expose themselves to the bright and/or blue spectrum light for a period of 15 or 20 minutes to stimulate wakefulness and force their bodies to "reset" to an earlier schedule. That earlier schedule, combined with no napping, can help generate a stronger sleep drive that helps them to fall asleep at a reasonable time at night.

A third example: People who suffer from jet lag find that using full spectrum light following a very specific schedule while traveling, before traveling and after they come home can help to reduce the side effects of crossing multiple time zones, which can be problematic for circadian rhythm function.

A final example: Third ("graveyard") shift works may find that using a light box during a specific time during their evening shift can help them to remain awake and focused.

These are nonspecific examples and do not constitute treatment that's "one size fits all." All of these potential therapies do not happen with just one day-night use; this course of therapy must be repeated according to a specific schedule for it to work, and for some people who are very challenged by circadian rhythm dysfunction, it could take a long time to correct or may not even work at all.

A person who is interested in using light therapy for sleep problems would be best advised to work with a medical professional trained in this kind of treatment if they have been diagnosed with a circadian rhythm disorder or insomnia or jet lag. Light therapy can exacerbate some health conditions and can interfere with certain kinds of drug therapies.

About the delivery system
Most light therapy uses something called a "light box," or a bright full-spectrum lamp or a wearable headpiece garment to deliver up to 10,000 lux (units of light) across a specific distance, making these light delivery systems much brighter than normal household lighting.

Keep in mind that, however, that on an overcast winter's morning, if the sun is up, the brightness of sunlight even under these conditions is far brighter than interior manmade lighting, including these devices, and it is the more natural resource of light that human brains and bodies have been "syncing" to for millennia. Instead of using a light therapy delivery system, some people may simply benefit from a half-hour walk outside at the same time in the morning to get "re-entrained" to their circadian rhythms.

Are there risks? 
Using a delivery system for light therapy requires that patients not stare directly at the light, and that they remain a certain specified distance from the light for a specified period of time and at a specific time of day in order to achieve maximum results.

People with sleep problems who are not yet diagnosed should resist buying and using a light delivery system without first meeting with a clinician to discuss diagnosis of their problems first. Many sleep problems require a diagnosis first; you would not want to invest in special lights if they were not the proper treatment for your sleep problem and, in fact, could worsen your condition. If light therapy is indicated as a treatment option by your doctor, only then should you use it, and only for the duration and timing prescribed by your physician. If prescribed, purchases of light therapy equipment may even be covered by insurance, but not so if you are self-treating without the guidance of a doctor.

Side effects for light therapy, even for those prescribed it by a physician, include headache, nausea, eye irritation and jitters. Those with mood disorders will require special attention as light therapy can agitate their conditions. Light therapy devices should be built to filter out ultraviolet (UV) rays; if you purchase such a device, please ensure this critical safety feature has been built into your device. Exposure to concentrations of UV rays can be dangerous to both the skin and eyes.

Sources consulted

Circadian Sleep Disorders Network || Light Therapy
Columbia University || Q&A on Bright Light Therapy
Mayo Clinic || Light Therapy
National Sleep Foundation || Light Therapy for Insomnia Sufferers
News-Medical.net || What is Light Therapy?
.profita || Lightwear: An Exploration in Wearable Light Therapy for Seasonal Affective Disorder
Sleep Education || Bright Light Therapy


A friendly reminder that links to websites offering products does not imply endorsement by SleepyHeadCENTRAL.com.

SleepyHeadCENTRAL strongly encourages people with ongoing sleep health problems to approach a medical professional to determine appropriate differential diagnoses and treatment. This post, like all other posts on SHC, is not intended to substitute for medical advice.