The treatment of early-morning awakening insomnia with 2 evenings of bright light

Leon Lack, Helen Wright, Kristyn Kemp, Samantha Gibbon

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    123 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Study Objective: To assess the effectiveness of brief bright-light therapy for the treatment of early-morning awakening insomnia. 

    Participants: Twenty-four healthy adults with early-morning awakening insomnia were assigned to either the bright-light condition (2,500-lux white light) or the control (dim red light) condition. 

    Measurements and Results: The circadian phase of rectal temperature and urinary melatonin rhythms were assessed with 26-hour constant routines before and after 2 evenings of light therapy. Sleep and daytime functioning were monitored using sleep diaries, activity monitors, and mood scales before light therapy and for 4 weeks during the follow-up period. While there were no significant circadian phase changes in the dim-light control group, the bright-light group had significant 2-hour phase delays of circadian temperature and melatonin rhythm. Compared to pretreatment measures, over the 4-week follow-up period, the bright-light group had a greater reduction of time awake after sleep onset, showed a trend toward waking later, and had a greater increase of total sleep time. Participants in the bright-light condition also tended to report greater reductions of negative daytime symptoms, including significantly fewer days of feeling depressed at the 4-week follow-up, as compared with the control group. 

    Conclusion: Two evenings of bright-light exposure phase delayed the circadian rhythms of early-morning awakening insomniacs. It also improved diary and actigraphy sleep measures and improved some indexes of daytime functioning for up to 1 month after light exposure. The study suggests that a brief course of evening bright-light therapy can be an effective treatment for early-morning awakening insomniacs who have relatively phase advanced circadian rhythms.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)616-623
    Number of pages8
    JournalSLEEP
    Volume28
    Issue number5
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - May 2005

    Keywords

    • Body temperature
    • Bright light
    • Circadian rhythm
    • Early morning awakening insomnia
    • Melatonin

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