Hot topics close

Body temperature is linked to depression: Study

Body temperature is linked to depression Study
Individuals with depression may benefit from lowering their body temperatures, as they tend to be higher.

Washington DC: A study from UC San Francisco revealed that individuals with depression may benefit from lowering their body temperatures, as they tend to be higher.

The study, published in Scientific Reports, does not clarify whether depression causes increased body temperature or vice versa. People with depression may have a higher body temperature due to impaired self-cooling, increased heat output from metabolic processes, or a combination of the two.

Researchers analyzed data from more than 20,000 international participants who wore a device that measures body temperature and also self-reported their body temperatures and depression symptoms daily.

The seven-month study began in early 2020 and included data from 106 countries.

The results showed that with each increasing level of depression symptom severity, participants had higher body temperatures.

The body temperature data also showed a trend toward higher depression scores in people whose temperatures had less fluctuation throughout a 24-hour period, but this finding didn't reach significance.

The findings shed light on how a novel depression treatment method might work, said Ashley Mason, PhD, the study's lead author and associate professor of psychiatry at UCSF Weill Institute for Neurosciences.

A small body of existing, causal studies has found that using hot tubs or saunas can reduce depression, possibly by triggering the body to self-cool, for example, through sweating.

"Ironically, heating people up actually can lead to rebound body temperature lowering that lasts longer than simply cooling people down directly, as through an ice bath," said Mason, who is also a clinical psychologist at the UCSF Osher Center for Integrative Health.

"What if we can track the body temperature of people with depression to time heat-based treatments well?"

"To our knowledge, this is the largest study to date to examine the association between body temperature - assessed using both self-report methods and wearable sensors - and depressive symptoms in a geographically broad sample," added Mason.

"Given the climbing rates of depression in the United States, we're excited by the possibilities of a new avenue for treatment.

Similar news
News Archive
  • UFC 300
    UFC 300
    Promises kept: UFC 300 was the single greatest night of fights in ...
    14 Apr 2024
    18
  • Brescia vs Juventus
    Brescia vs Juventus
    European football: Barcelona v Villarreal & Brescia v Juventus - Live
    24 Sep 2019
    2
  • Afghanistan
    Afghanistan
    Urgent need to rethink humanitarian approach in Afghanistan
    3 May 2024
    16
  • Monaco vs PSG
    Monaco vs PSG
    AS Monaco vs Paris Saint-Germain: Lineups and LIVE updates
    11 Feb 2023
    4
  • Taman Desa Bakti
    Taman Desa Bakti
    Taman Wilayah, Taman Desa Bakti & Pasar Chow Kit Fenced Off With Barbed Wire By Army
    5 May 2020
    2