Literature DB >> 12470128

Patients with seasonal affective disorder have lower odor detection thresholds than control subjects.

Teodor T Postolache1, Thomas A Wehr, Richard L Doty, Leo Sher, Erick H Turner, John J Bartko, Norman E Rosenthal.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Behavioral changes in patients with seasonal affective disorder resemble seasonal changes in photoperiodic animals. Because the olfactory system has a modulatory role in seasonal photoperiodic responses in certain species, we hypothesized that olfactory function may differ between patients with seasonal affective disorder and healthy control subjects.
METHODS: Fourteen patients who had winter seasonal affective disorder and 16 healthy volunteers were studied once in winter and once in the subsequent summer. We administered a phenyl ethyl alcohol detection threshold test to each side of the nose in a counterbalanced order, with the nostril contralateral to the tested site occluded. Patient and control data were compared using a 4-way repeated measure analysis of covariance (with group and gender as between-subjects factors, season and side-of-the-nose as within-subjects factors, and age as a covariate).
RESULTS: The patients exhibited lower thresholds than did the controls (F(1,25) = 9.2; P =.006). There was no main effect of season.
CONCLUSION: In humans, marked seasonal behavioral rhythms with recurrent winter depression may be associated with a more acute sense of smell.

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Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12470128     DOI: 10.1001/archpsyc.59.12.1119

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry        ISSN: 0003-990X


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