How Sunlight Affects Your Mental Health
Sunlight has a profound impact on your mental health — more so than any other weather phenomenon. That's the conclusion of a recent study looking at links between weather and depression.
Mental health data from more than 16,000 Brigham Young University students was used. Assessments had been filled out several times by each person over the course of six years. Each assessment was then matched to local weather data.
Nineteen different environmental factors, including solar irradiance (the amount of sunlight reaching the Earth), cloud cover, rain, wind chill, barometric pressure and smog levels were accounted for.
In the end, the only factor that really mattered was the amount of time between sunrise and sunset. None of the other factors had any significant association with emotional distress — provided there was enough sunlight.
This doesn't surprise me. It's been estimated that as many as 20 percent of Americans are affected by Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) each winter, suffering from the blues, fatigue and in some cases, more serious depression, as sunlight grows scarce.
What differentiates SAD from regular depression is that a full remission occurs in the spring and summer months.
Depression Rates Rise During Fall and Winter
Indeed, as the days got shorter through fall and winter, self-reports of depression rose, whether the student had been diagnosed with SAD or not. According to the authors:
"These findings suggest the need for institutions and public health entities to plan for intervention and prevention resources and strategies during periods of reduced sun time."
The researchers note that more research is needed to evaluate related factors such as vitamin D intake, amount of time actually spent outdoors and sunbed use. Indeed, a deficiency of the vital nutrient of vitamin D, which can be counteracted with vitamin D3 supplements, is strongly associated with a higher risk of depression.
For example, research has shown having a vitamin D level below 20 nanograms per milliliter (ng/mL) can raise your risk for depression by as much as 85 percent, compared to having a vitamin D level greater than 30 ng/mL.
A number of studies have also confirmed that vitamin D supplementation can help alleviate symptoms of depression.
A study published in 2015, which looked at healthy women aged 18 to 25 who lived in the Pacific Northwest during the fall, winter and spring, found that vitamin D insufficiency (30 ng/ml or lower) could predict the emergence of clinically significant depressive symptoms.
The link remained even after controlling for factors such as season, body mass index, race, diet, exercise and time spent outdoors.
By the fourth and final week of the study, 46 percent of the women had insufficient levels of vitamin D, and during the course of the study up to 42 percent of them showed signs of clinically significant depression, based on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale. As reported by HCP Live:
"'Vitamin D supplements are inexpensive and readily available,' [lead author David] Kerr concluded, adding that the findings are consistent with literature that supports seasonal depressive symptoms."
I am somewhat skeptical of using oral vitamin D to address this problem. Vitamin D levels in the above study likely correlate well with SAD as they indicate sunlight exposure. When you separate the sunlight from vitamin D by swallowing it, I suspect you are dramatically reducing the mental benefits.
Sun Exposure Affects Health in Many Ways Besides Vitamin D
When we talk about sun exposure to optimize vitamin D production, we're really only looking at a small portion of the action spectrum of light, because ultraviolet B radiation is the only portion able to photosynthesize vitamin D in your skin.
But the health effects and benefits of sunlight are not restricted to ultraviolet B. Swiss specialist Dr. Auguste Rollier, who has written textbooks on heliotherapy, emphasized that the composition of the different parts of the light spectrum are of crucial importance to achieve all of the benefits you can get from the sun.
According to Dr. Alexander Wunsch, a German physician and one of the world's leading experts in photobiology, humans are adapted to sunlight as a complex stimulus, and when you remove that stimulus (sunlight), you end up with a variety of problems. As noted by Wunsch in a previous interview:
"Sunlight induces coordinated endocrine adaptation effects. It affects sympathetic and parasympathetic activity, and is a major circadian and seasonal stimulus for the body clock …
Our system, via the eyes and via the skin, detects the colors of the light in the environment in order to adapt the hormonal system to the specific needs of the time and place."
How Sunlight Can Influence Your Mood
According to a paper published in the journal Dermato-Endocrinology,6 a large number of molecules (chromophores) found in the different layers of your skin absorb and interact with ultraviolet rays, producing a number of complex and synergistic effects.
There are additional chromophores in your mitochondria electron transport chain that respond to near-infrared. This complex stimulus of sunlight affects not only your physical health by preventing diseases, it also impacts your mood and mental health. For example:
Your body uses the near-infrared light spectrum to produce mitochondrial energy and maintain systemic equilibrium.
Near-infrared also primes the cells in your retina for repair and regeneration, which explains why light-emitting diode (LED) lighting — which is devoid of infrared — is so harmful for your eyes. To learn more about this, please see my interview with Wunsch, "How LED Lighting May Compromise Your Health."
Now, if near-infrared plays such an important role in your body's energy production, it seems reasonable to conclude that if you're running low on adenosine triphosphate (ATP) — cellular energy — due to insufficient amounts of sunlight exposure, you'd start feeling sluggish and tired, and possibly depressed.
Sunlight also regulates your circadian rhythm, and light therapy has been shown to be effective against depression, both SAD and non-seasonal major depression.
When it's dark, your melatonin levels increase, which is why you may feel tired when the sun starts to set. In the heart of winter, this may be at as early as 4:00 p.m.
Ultraviolet (UV) light also stimulates epidermal cells known as keratinocytes to make beta-endorphins, which have a mood-boosting effect.
Serotonin is also released in response to sunlight, which helps elevate your mood and energy.
UVA generates nitric oxide (NO) in your skin, which influences your body in a number of beneficial ways. It stimulates up to 60 percent of your blood to flow to your skin capillaries where they absorb this energy and infrared radiation.
The UVA actually helps kill any infections in your blood while the infrared recharges your cellular battery.
NO also protects your heart by relaxing your blood vessels and lowering your blood pressure, stimulates your brain and acts as a natural antioxidant. By lowering inflammation, it could have a beneficial impact on your mental health, as depression is strongly linked to chronic, low-grade inflammation.
Part of why vitamin D appears to improve depression relates to the fact that it's a potent anti-inflammatory.
Vitamin D Deficiency Predisposes You to Depression
Getting back to vitamin D, there's ample evidence suggesting vitamin D plays an important role in mental health, so if fall and winter months leave you feeling blue, you'd be wise to get your levels checked. If you're below 40 ng/mL, a vitamin D supplement would be advisable.
In one 2006 study, seniors with vitamin D levels below 20 ng/ml were found to be 1,100 percent more prone to be depressed than those with higher levels7
A 2007 study suggested that vitamin D deficiency is responsible for symptoms of depression and anxiety in patients with fibromyalgia8
Vitamin D deficiency is also a well-recognized cause in SAD9
A double-blind randomized trial published in 2008 suggested there's a CAUSAL relationship between low vitamin D levels and depression, noting that high doses of vitamin D were effective at ameliorating symptoms of depression10
In a 2011 study, the authors also pointed out that:11 "Effective detection and treatment of inadequate vitamin D levels in persons with depression and other mental disorders may be an easy and cost-effective therapy which could improve patients' long-term health outcomes as well as their quality of life"
Based on the evaluation of healthy populations that get plenty of natural sun exposure, the optimal range for general physical and mental health appears to be somewhere between 40 and 70 ng/ml. So, if you're depressed, get your vitamin D level checked, and to address any insufficiency or deficiency. The D*Action Project by GrassrootsHealth is one cost-effective testing solution.
Just keep in mind that if you opt for a vitamin D supplement, you also need to take vitamin K2 and magnesium, as these nutrients work in tandem. Also, since vitamin D is fat-soluble, taking it some form of healthy fat will help optimize absorption. Vitamin A, zinc and boron are other important cofactors that interact with vitamin D.
Original article: https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2016/12/01/sunlight-depression.aspx