mattbell: (Default)
[personal profile] mattbell
After hearing about blue-blocking glasses at the Life Extension Conference, I decided to give them a try.  The basic principle behind them is that your body keys its circadian rhythm off of the presence of sunlight, specifically light in the blue wavelengths.  A lot of insomnia (the hypothesis goes) is caused by exposure to blue light well after sunset via our artificial lights and computer screens.  This light apparently confuses our circadian rhythms and causes a suppression of melatonin production, which can lead to insomnia.  There have been some studies (both in mice and in human shift-workers) coming out linking a lack of melatonin to a variety of cancers. 

I've found melatonin to be useful as a sleep aid, but the idea of using blue-blocking glasses to naturally increase melatonin production earlier in the night seems even more appealing as it's less of a brute force method. 

Here's my experience after trying it for a few nights:

First, the world is ugly while wearing the glasses.  Each type of light is a different sickly shade of orange or yellow, and when they're both lighting an object, the combination of colors in the light and shadow areas is unpleasant and irritable.  It's like some bad '70s nightmare.

The color gamuts of the camera and computer monitor are insufficient to capture the rancid sickliness of these colors, no matter how much I try to manipulate the white balance or use Lightroom's advanced color management. 

The world with blue-blocking glasses  The world with blue-blocking glasses
The world with blue-blocking glasses  The world with blue-blocking glasses

Especially on the first day, this miscolored world made me irritable.  It's become less annoying with further uses though.  One frustration that doesn't go away is that the glasses make you blind to a lot of information on the computer.  Graphs will have lines missing, blue buttons will be invisible, unvisited and visited web links will be the same color.  It gives me more appreciation for what red-green colorblind people have to deal with. 

However, on the plus side, they do appear to work.  While I haven't noticed much decrease in the time it takes me to get to bed, I have noticed that it makes me get up earlier and with less grogginess.  That alone makes them worth using on certain days.  Scientifically this makes sense, as suppressing blue light in the evening causes the brain circuits responsible for controlling circadian rhythms to start (and thus end) the night phase earlier. 

While wearing the glasses can be a pain, there are some easier things that you can do to help your body have a more natural rhythm:
- Buy red LED night lights.  Turning on bright bathroom lights in the middle of the night totally messes up your melatonin production.
- Get red compact fluorescent lamps for your bathroom, bedroom, and living room, and use them exclusively during the last hour or two that you're awake. 
- Turn your monitors' brightness as far down as possible during the last couple of hours of the day.

I'll be doing more quantitative research on the glasses over the next month or two.

If you want to buy the glasses, you can buy them from lowbluelights.com for $70 or from Amazon for $10.  your choice.  :-) 

For $10, they're worth a try. 

Date: 2010-10-21 07:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zellandyne.livejournal.com
Nifty. I'm tempted to try them. My melatonin production, last time I had it tested, was way off. I ultimately found that I had to take 10mg of melatonin around 6 pm to kickstart my system enough that I could get start getting sleepy by 10. And then I found out the melatonin I was using had gluten in it. Haven't replaced it yet. At the moment, I use ambien. Which is less than ideal.

Date: 2010-10-21 07:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nasu-dengaku.livejournal.com
Wow... 10mg is a lot of melatonin.

Yeah, the glasses are worth trying, though if you're taking Ambien every night, I'm guessing the withdraw symptoms from Ambien would be stronger than the effect of the glasses. So it's probably worth adding the glasses first as opposed to trying to replace the Ambien with them.

Date: 2010-10-22 07:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zellandyne.livejournal.com
I know it :/ On the melatonin and the ambien. I've been trying to wean down off the ambien. Part of the problem is that my CPAP pressure is set too high, and the discomfort from that keeps waking me when I don't use Ambien. I'm currently engaged in a tug of war with my doc about changing the pressure. *shrug* If they don't give in after the next thing we try (turbinate reduction) I'm hacking the machine myself.

Profile

mattbell: (Default)
mattbell

February 2011

S M T W T F S
   123 45
67 89101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728     

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 12th, 2025 08:58 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios