Do You Have Seasonal Affective Disorder?
Just like fibromylagia,and ADD (attention deficit disorder),
Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) is a hard to diagnose and
easily disregarded or overlooked condition or form of
depression. Some people get the winter blues. Some just feel
sluggish and have a hard time getting out of bed in the morning.
But, for some it is a serious, almost debilitating disorder. For
some it can lead to an actual diagnosis for depression.
For some it is just a mild, temporary feeling of helplessness -
a very minor form of depression. For others it can be very
serious. As evidenced in many studies, 1 out of every 10 people
have some manifestation of SAD. And just like with regular
depression, there have been cases ending in suicide, progression
into different forms of depression and psychosis including manic
depression, multiple personality disorder (schizophrenia), etc...
Key indicators that one has SAD are sluggishness, sleeping over
10 hours per day and still feeling tired, general lethargy,
migraines that can be quite severe and usually hit their peak
with drops in barmometric pressure. Studies have shown that
depressed people are more susceptible to temperature extremes
which some researches have attributed to evidenced lower
sustained levels of electrolytes and essential minerals and
salts in the body and brain. One of these is potassium. It has
been proven that low levels of potassium can bring on severe
migrains. Another is vitamin D and sun exposure - many doctors
believe that the seasonal limited sun exposure and lower levels
of vitamin D produced at the cellular level in our skin can
bring on SAD all by itself.
SAD can begin at any age, but is rarely evidenced in childhood.
It occurs mostly women age 35 and above. If one or more symptoms
of SAD can be seen it is strongly suggested that one seek
appropriate medical care. It could be something as simple as a
chemical imbalance that a small change in diet could quickly
fix. Sometimes a trip to a spa for a skin treatment or skin peel
can be enough to offset the condition. Or it could be more
severe. There is no reason to let this condition go and suffer
through it. With recent advances in medicine SAD can be treated
very effectively and the sufferers quality of life greatly
improved.