Bipolar mood cycles associated with lunar entrainment of a circadian rhythm

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Abstract

In bipolar disorder, episodes of depression and mania are associated with dramatic disturbances in sleep, which experiments show are likely to contribute to the pathogenesis of the episodes. A recent finding that 18 patients’ manic-depressive cycles oscillated in synchrony with biweekly surges in amplitude of the moon’s tides provided a clue to the cause of the sleep-disturbances. Analyses of one of the patients’ sleep–wake cycles suggest that his mood cycles arose when a circadian rhythm that normally is entrained to dawn and controls the daily onset of wakefulness became entrained instead to 24.8-h recurrences of every second 12.4-h tidal cycle. The finding provides the basis for a comprehensive description of the pathogenesis and pathophysiology of the mood cycle.

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APA

Wehr, T. A. (2018). Bipolar mood cycles associated with lunar entrainment of a circadian rhythm. Translational Psychiatry, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-018-0203-x

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