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S27-01 - Sleep Timing and Sleep Manipulation as Antidepressants

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 April 2020

A. Wirz-Justice*
Affiliation:
Centre for Chronobiology, Psychiatric Hospital, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland

Abstract

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Disturbed sleep is an intrinsic symptom of depression and may precede or even initiate it. Thus, it is surprising that depriving a patient of sleep can induce improvement, often within hours - however usually with relapse following recovery sleep. Clinical trials of early and late partial sleep deprivation, or shifting sleep earlier, suggest a critical circadian phase where wakefulness is necessary for the antidepressant response. Combination with medication or light therapy can maintain improvement. There is now sufficient evidence for many chronotherapeutic combinations (Table) to support the use of “wake therapy” - the fastest antidepressant modality known - in general psychiatric practice (1).

THERAPEUTIC RESPONSELATENCYDURATION
Total (TSD) or partial (PSD) sleep deprivationhours∼ 1 day
Phase advance of the sleep-wake cycle∼ 2 days∼ 2 weeks
TSD followed by phase advancehours∼ 2 weeks
Repeated TSD or PSDhoursdays/weeks
Repeated TSD or PSD + ADshoursweeks/months
Single or repeated TSD or PSD + light therapy; phase advance & light therapyhoursweeks/months
Single or repeated TSD or PSD + lithium, pindolol, or SSRIshoursmonths
Light therapy (SAD + non-seasonal MD)week(s)weeks/months
Light therapy + SSRIs (non-seasonal MD)daysmonths

[Circadian and Sleep Therapies of Major Depression]

Type
Sleep and psychiatry: Sleep timing and sleep manipulation as antidepressants
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2010

References

WirzJustice, A. Benedetti, F. Terman, M. (2009) Chronotherapeutics for Affective Disorders. A Clinician's Manual for Light and Wake Therapy. S.Karger AG, Basel.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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