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MyDepressionConnection.com

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Friday, August 29, 2008

Introduction

(Page 3)

Atypical Depression

About a third of patients with depression have atypical depression. Symptoms include overeating and oversleeping. Such patients tend to have a feeling of being weighed down and react strongly to rejection. It tends to occur more in women, unmarried people, and those with other emotional disorders, such as anxiety or substance abuse. It also may impair functioning more severely than ordinary depression does.

Seasonal Affective Disorder

Seasonal affective disorder (SAD) is characterized by annual episodes of depression during fall or winter that remit in the spring or summer. Other SAD symptoms include fatigue, a tendency to overeat (particularly carbohydrates) and to oversleep in winter. A minority of individuals with SAD has the more common depressive symptoms of undereating and being sleepless. SAD tends to last about 5 months in those who live in the northern part of the U.S.

Seasonal changes affect many people's moods, regardless of gender and whether or not they have SAD. Simply being mildly depressed during the winter does not mean that one has SAD. Living in a northern country with long winter nights does not guarantee a higher risk for depression. Changes in light may not be the only contributor to SAD.


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Review Date: 12/21/2006
Reviewed By: Harvey Simon, MD, Editor-in-Chief, Associate Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School; Physician, Massachusetts General Hospital.

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