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Increased Prevalence of Unnatural Blue Spectrum Light Leading to Negative Consequence

CoffeeDrinker

Bluelighter
Joined
Oct 6, 2009
Messages
4,079
Location
Bohemian Grove
Does Bluelight truly affect harm reduction? Not at night it doesn't.

http://www.health.harvard.edu/newsletters/Harvard_Health_Letter/2012/May/blue-light-has-a-dark-side/

Study after study has linked working the night shift and exposure to light at night to several types of cancer (breast, prostate), diabetes, heart disease, and obesity. It's not exactly clear why nighttime light exposure seems to be so bad for us. But we do know that exposure to light suppresses the secretion of melatonin, a hormone that influences circadian rhythms, and there's some experimental evidence (it's very preliminary) that lower melatonin levels might explain the association with cancer.

A Harvard study shed a little bit of light on the possible connection to diabetes and possibly obesity. The researchers put 10 people on a schedule that gradually shifted the timing of their circadian rhythms. Their blood sugar levels increased, throwing them into a prediabetic state, and levels of leptin, a hormone that leaves people feeling full after a meal, went down.

Even dim light can interfere with a person's circadian rhythm and melatonin secretion. A mere eight lux—a level of brightness exceeded by most table lamps and about twice that of a night light—has an effect, notes Stephen Lockley, a Harvard sleep researcher. Light at night is part of the reason so many people don't get enough sleep, says Lockley, and researchers have linked short sleep to increased risk for depression, as well as diabetes and cardiovascular problems.

The Power of the blues
While light of any kind can suppress the secretion of melatonin, blue light does so more powerfully. Harvard researchers and their colleagues conducted an experiment comparing the effects of 6.5 hours of exposure to blue light to exposure to green light of comparable brightness. The blue light suppressed melatonin for about twice as long as the green light and shifted circadian rhythms by twice as much (3 hours vs. 1.5 hours).
 
This is partially why I take melatonin every night before bed.

Melatonin is a miracle drug, one of (maybe the only?) drug that does not show any effects of tolerance. It's also one of the most powerful antioxidants found on Earth, which explains the health problems mentioned in the article.
 
Cool study, thanks for posting it.

I'm wondering though if taking melatonin can really replace your body's endogenous process? I find that melatonin only works the first few days then it stops working.

Also, in the winter when there is less light, I stay up way later. Exposure to light during the wakeful period must also have something to do with what happens when darkness finally comes. I don't sleep well if I don't get enough daylight, and likewise interruptions in darkness are a problem too.
 
I doubt any external drug replaces the natural secretion of it, but clinical studies (whatever that's worth) don't support your claim. If that's just your experience, sucks for you =P.

If you're still chillin in artificial light, no, it won't work as well. It also has peak volume in your blood about 30 minutes after taking it, so maybe you're not using it properly.

Regardless it's just as important to take it for antioxidant reasons.
 
I somewhere read that blue light suppresses melatonin more significantly than other wave lengths. Incandescent (sp?) light bulbs produce very little blue light compared to the newer, fluorescent bulbs, so that explains the increasing rates of insomnia.
Changing bluelight's main color from blue to red should in theory improve our sleep.
 
Red light was found to be the best for restoring circadian rhythms/melatonin production. Thanks for the reminder, been meaning to get in on the Red Light scene : D ....O! double entendre snaaap.

I've thought about getting a red light for my bedroom, but it feels kind of ghetto... plus I remember reading not long ago that it can ruin your eyes to only be exposed to one spectrum of light for a long time. (I could be remembering that wrong though.)
 
I'm wondering though if taking melatonin can really replace your body's endogenous process? I find that melatonin only works the first few days then it stops working.

I've noticed it feels like it stops working, as well. But perhaps there is therapeutic value that we just don't feel?
 
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I've thought about getting a red light for my bedroom, but it feels kind of ghetto... plus I remember reading not long ago that it can ruin your eyes to only be exposed to one spectrum of light for a long time. (I could be remembering that wrong though.)

Me too...Really the best option is to limit light at night, get used to walking around in the dark, not using technology hours before bed (ya Right! ^.^). I'm gonna get a red light and use it half an hour before bed each night and see what happens, if anything.

Coffeedrinker that made me chuckle well too : D
 
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