4.4 Article

Blocking blue light during mania - markedly increased regularity of sleep and rapid improvement of symptoms: a case report

Journal

BIPOLAR DISORDERS
Volume 16, Issue 8, Pages 894-898

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/bdi.12265

Keywords

actigraphy; blue-blockers; case report; mania; sleep; virtual darkness

Funding

  1. Fonna Local Health Authority
  2. Western Norway Regional Health Authority
  3. MoodNet, a regional research network on mood disorders located at Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway

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ObjectiveAvailable pharmacological treatment of mania is insufficient. Virtual darkness therapy (blue light-blocking treatment by means of orange-tinted glasses) is a promising new treatment option for mania. The basis for this might be the recently identified blue light-sensitive retinal photoreceptor, which is solely responsible for light stimulus to the circadian master clock. This is the first case report describing the clinical course of a closely monitored, hospitalized patient in a manic episode first receiving clear-lensed, and then blue light-blocking glasses. MethodsA 58-year-old Caucasian man, with bipolar I disorder and three previous manic episodes, was hospitalized during a manic episode. In addition to pharmacological treatment, he was treated with clear-lensed glasses for seven days, then one day without glasses, followed by six days of blue light-blocking glasses. During the entire observational period, he wore an actigraph with internal light sensors. ResultsManic symptoms were unaltered during the first seven days. The transition to the blue-blocking regime was followed by a rapid and sustained decline in manic symptoms accompanied by a reduction in total sleep, a reduction in motor activity during sleep intervals, and markedly increased regularity of sleep intervals. The patient's total length of hospital stay was 20days shorter than the average time during his previous manic episodes. ConclusionsThe unusually rapid decline in symptoms, accompanied by uniform sleep parameter changes toward markedly increased regularity, suggest that blue-blockers might be targeting a central mechanism in the pathophysiology of mania that needs to be explored both in clinical research and in basic science.

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