Tuesday 20 November 2012

SAD and the Winter Blues: GP Tips


‘In the dark time of the year…
The soul’s sap quivers.’
 
TS Eliot, ‘Little Gidding’

For many of us, as the dark descends so does our mood. I’ve never understood why ‘SAD’, to some people at least, has been a controversial diagnosis. Compared to a lot of nonsense in the DSM, the diagnosis of SAD as recurrent major depressive episodes with a seasonal pattern’ seems to just to be what it says on the tin.
 
Who gets it?
 
In the UK 6% of adults suffer from SAD but many more, perhaps most of us, get a milder form of ‘winter blues’. It tends to come on in early adulthood, but can occur in children, and women are more often affected.  
 
How does it present?
 
People of course rarely come in and say I have ‘SAD’. But people with SAD consult us much more than matched control groups with non-specific symptoms.  As well as the typical symptoms of depression it presents with atypical (‘hibernation-like’) symptoms such as hyper-somnolence, carbohydrate craving and weight gain.  The symptoms of SAD often resonate with seasonal changes seen elsewhere in the animal world. Top of my list of ‘research papers I never get time to write’ is that it is my impression that ‘tired all the time’ consultations become more frequent once the darkness descends.
 
What causes SAD?
 
Serotonin metabolism has a seasonal pattern and melatonin metabolism is also thought to play a role. Melatonin secretion is stimulated by darkness and suppressed by light. Failure to switch off melatonin, which may have a genetic component, has been implicated as a cause. This may be linked to seasonal changes seen elsewhere in the animal world. Even algae demonstrate seasonal changes in behaviour, and some evolutionary biologists have suggested SAD may be a reflection of an energy-conserving hibernation like state which is adaptive. Some papers have found an association (no surprise) with Vitamin D deficiency, but there is no convincing evidence that Vitamin D supplementation prevents it.
 
How should we diagnose it?
 
As with everything in general practice, awareness and an open mind is key. It is worth asking about seasonal changes in mood and behaviour in people presenting not just with depression but with ‘tired all the time’, hyper-somnolence and ‘I just feel run down doctor’ in the winter months.

 
What treatments are proven to work?
 
There is evidence for antidepressants, light therapy and (of course..) CBT!

  • Light therapy
·         It is thought that morning light therapy might suppress excess melatonin secretion and influence serotonin metabolism.  A systematic review of RCTs of bright light therapy for SAD comparing at least 3,000 lux-hours  daily compared to a control of just 300 lux showed persistently positive outcome for the light therapy
·         This ‘light therapy’ usually consists of no more than sitting 2 or 3 feet away from a bright light ‘box’ on a table, you can read/work at the same time, for 30-60 minutes a day.  A ‘dawn simulator’ light is an alternative strategy.
·         SAD lights cannot be prescribed on the NHS, but if patients have SAD they do not have to pay VAT i.e. a 20% discount.

o   Antidepressants

·         There is a lack of good quality evidence, but there is some RCT evidence for fluoxetine. For selected patients, these may just be taken in autumn and winter (NB anecdotally I have a number of patients who find it very helpful to start them when the clocks go back and then tail off when the clocks spring forward again)
·        For colleagues in the US, there is good evidence for buproprion (Wellbutrin XL) as a preventive strategy

A recent BMJ review of the evidence (below) concluded: ‘Using a light box or dawn simulation appears to be a reasonable first-line approach to relieve mild or moderate depressive symptoms instead of, or as well as, drug therapy and/or CBT. Patients with more severe symptoms should be treated with antidepressant drugs with or without light therapy and/or CBT’
 
Self-help. There is a lack of evidence for exercise, but anecdotally it definitely seems to help!  NHS direct has a useful self-help leaflet for SAD and also for ‘winter blues’ recommending exercise, diet and exposure to natural light (see below)
 
Conclusion
 
Be aware of SAD and Winter Blues in patients presenting not just with low mood, but also ‘tired all the time’, hyper-somnolence and general malaise. For simple ‘Winter Blues’ advise lifestyle changes and consideration of light therapy. For established SAD consider light therapy, seasonal SSRIs and CBT. There is no convincing evidence for Vitamin D, but given there is an association with Vitamin D deficiency supplementation may be worthwhile.

 Simon

Resources for patients:

o   Great book, but quite detailed!


o   Very useful web-pages




o   Information on light therapy


http://www.lumie.com/  (NB this company offer a free 30 day trial; if its going to work it should be by then! No conflict of interest here.)

References:






 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SAD was reviewed in the BMJ 2010:340:c2135

 

 

o   The SAD association www.sada.org.uk has useful information on how to do it, manufacturers and costs of lights etc.)

 

Thursday 8 November 2012

AAA screening

The new NHS screening programme for AAA is being rolled out. The information for patients and drs states that screening 'could reduce the rate of premature death from ruptured AAA by up to 50%', but it fails to mention what this means in absolute terms. We covered this on the Hot Topics last year, see below. We believe patients and doctors should be aware that this 50% 'relative risk' reduction in absolute terms is from 0.87% to 0.46%, and that despite 67,000 people being included in the original study there was no reduction in overall mortality.


A screening programme for AAA for men aged 65 (www.aaa.screening.nhs.uk) is being introduced gradually across England, it started in 2009 and it is anticipated it will be nationwide by 2013. In Scotland it will be phased in between 20011 and 2013, and details in Wales and NI have yet to be formalised. The programme is based closely on the protocol of the The Multicentre Aneurysm Screening Study (BMJ2009;338:b2307)    
·         67,000 men were recruited from 4 UK centres aged 65-74 and randomised to be invited for screening, or not.
·         Overall, screening halved (RRR of 48%) the risk of AAA related deaths
·         However, the absolute differences are very small
o   155 AAA deaths in the invited group (0.46%) compared with 286 (0.87%) in the control group
·         There was no difference in overall mortality and the mean age of death (75) was the same in the invited and control groups
Should I have the test doc?
The NHS screening programme has produced a leaflet for doctors explaining how the process will work (www.aaa.screening.nhs.uk). We can inform our patients that of every 1,000 men invited:

  • 960 will have a normal scan
  • 35 will have a small aneurysm, which will need regular surveillance and monitoring (including more aggressive CV risk factor reduction and treatment of hypertension)
  • 5 in 1,000 will have a large aneurysm and be offered surgery

 What about women?

The screening programme is looking at asymptomatic men aged 65. Women who are at high risk (e.g. due to family history, or multiple risk factors, or both) may of course be offered a routine scan outside of the screening programme. Men over 65 can self-refer to be screened.

 

AAA Screening: NB Practice Points
·         Screening has started, and men aged over 65 will be invited for a scan
·         The MASS study shows that screening for AAA will halve the risk of a AAA related deaths in men, from approx. 1% to 0.5%.
·         Women at high risk will need to have a scan arranged by you independently; they are not included in the screening programme