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Chronobiology International
The Journal of Biological and Medical Rhythm Research
Volume 35, 2018 - Issue 11
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Original Articles

Rest-activity rhythms characteristics and seasonal changes in seasonal affective disorder

, , , ORCID Icon, , & show all
Pages 1553-1559 | Received 04 Apr 2018, Accepted 29 Jun 2018, Published online: 19 Jul 2018
 

ABSTRACT

Identifying objectively measurable seasonal changes in 24-h activity patterns (rest-activity rhythms or RARs) that occur in seasonal affective disorder (SAD) could help guide research and practice towards new monitoring tools or prevention targets. We quantified RARs from actigraphy data using non-parametric and extended cosine based approaches, then compared RARs between people with SAD and healthy controls in the summer (n = 70) and winter seasons (n = 84). We also characterized the within-person seasonal RAR changes that occurred in the SAD (n = 19) and control (n = 26) participants who contributed repeated measures. Only controls had significant winter increases in RAR fragmentation (intra-daily variability; in controls mean winter-summer changes (log scale) = 0.05, 0.21 standard deviation, p = 0.03). In SAD participants only, estimated evening settling times (down-mesor) were an average of 30 min earlier in the winter compared with the summer (1-h standard deviation, p = 0.045). These RAR characteristics correlated with greater fatigue (Spearman r = 0.36) but not depression symptom severity. Additional research is needed to ascertain why healthy controls, but not people with SAD, appear to have increased RAR fragmentation in the winter. People with SAD lacked this increase in RAR fragmentation, and instead had earlier evening setting in the winter. Prospective and intervention studies with greater temporal resolution are warranted to ascertain how these seasonal behavioral differences relate to fatigue pathophysiology in SAD. Future research is needed to determine whether extending the winter active period, even in relatively fragmented bouts, could help reduce the fatigue symptoms common in SAD.

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed here.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Mary E. Fletcher for her role processing the actigraphy data.

Declaration of Interest

The NIH had no role in the study design, data analysis and interpretation, report writing, or decision to submit the paper for publication. The authors report no conflicts of interest.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the NIH [R01 MH 103313-5; K01 MH112683; R01 DA033064; R01 GM 113243]

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