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Melatonin and Sleep. Garrick Wang, M.D., Ph.D. Stanford Sleep Disorders Clinic Stanford Dept. of Psychiatry. What is melatonin?. Hormone that is naturally produced by the pineal gland Conveys information to various parts of the body Chemical structure identified in 1958
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Melatonin and Sleep Garrick Wang, M.D., Ph.D. Stanford Sleep Disorders Clinic Stanford Dept. of Psychiatry
What is melatonin? • Hormone that is naturally produced by the pineal gland • Conveys information to various parts of the body • Chemical structure identified in 1958 • Expressed rhythmically throughout the day
Regulation of Melatonin • In the US, the FDA considers melatonin a “dietary supplement” • No need for a prescription • No regulation of dosing and preparations may have additives that affect bioavailibility, side effects, drug interactions • Not detected in food
Making Melatonin • Generated from amino acid tryptophan and serotonin • Is made predominantly at night in the pineal gland • Freely diffuses into bloodstream and crosses blood-brain barrier
Making Melatonin • Generated from amino acid tryptophan and serotonin • Is made predominantly at night in the pineal gland • Freely diffuses into bloodstream and crosses blood-brain barrier
Where Melatonin Binds • Works by binding 3 receptors • MT1 = Found in the SCN of hypothalamus, pituitary gland, cardiac blood vessels • MT2 = Retina and hippocampus • MT3 = Kidney, brain, other organs
SCN: Our internal clock • Suprachiasmatic Nucleus (SCN) is the site of internal biological clock • Many intrinsic properties cycle: cortisol, body temperature • Melatonin binding MT1 inhibits neuron activity
How Melatonin Works • Melatonin levels cycle • Low levels during daylight, rise during nighttime • Peak levels between 11PM and 3AM • Levels continue to cycle in constant darkness • Can slowly adjust to environmental changes
Melatonin Activity • Light acts indirectly, likely through retina, to inhibit melatonin synthesis and release • MT1 and MT2 receptors desensitize: activity decreases after exposure to excessively high levels of melatonin
Melatonin Secretion • Melatonin secretion starts at 3-4 months of age when nighttime sleeping consolidates • Peak levels at 1-3 years of age • Slightly lower levels through early adulthood • Marked decline in levels afterwards • Peak levels for 70 year olds is ¼ of levels for young adults
Melatonin Levels • Exogenous melatonin of 1-10mg raise levels 3-60x normal nighttime levels • Doses as low as 0.1 to 0.3 mg caused dose-related decreases in sleep latency and self-reported sleepiness and fatigue • Blood levels did not go above nighttime levels
Melatonin Activity • Metabolized by the liver • Propranolol, caffeine, and alcohol can interfere with melatonin activity • Vitamin B6 needed for synthesis. Estrogen, OCPs, hydralazine, lasix may affect levels • Levels can also be affected by preparation. Those in oil-based preparation lead to higher blood levels
Adverse Effects • Excess melatonin can lead to daytime sleepiness, impaired mental and physical performance, hypothermia, and high levels of prolactin • Menstrual irregularities, galactorrhea, impotence, decreased libido
Melatonin and Sleep Promotion • Analysis of 17 separate studies looking at people who slept normally or insomnia from a number of causes (e.g. age, jet lag, Alzheimer’s, schizophrenia) • Melatonin can decrease sleep latency (time between laying down and onset of sleep) • 4 minute decrease on average • Works in afternoon and evening as well
Melatonin and Sleep Promotion • Melatonin also increased sleep efficiency. • Sleep efficiency = amount of time asleep as percentage of total time in bed • Increase in total sleep duration of 12 minutes
Significance? • Hard to determine significance due to wide variations of studies • Doses ranging from 0.1 to 80 mg • Wide variety of subjects: sleep latency normal for most elderly, sleep efficiency not very affected for jet lag
Melatonin and Insomnia • Looking more closely at those with insomnia secondary to neurologic or psychiatric disease, as well as jet lag or shiftwork, melatonin did not help • Implies effectiveness for primary insomnia
Other Studies • Doses as low as 0.3 mg can decrease sleep latency, increase sleep duration and sleep efficiency without affecting body temperature. • Melatonin at early evening to help for prolonging elevated nocturnal melatonin levels (useful for shift workers and jet lag)
Melatonin and Insomnia • One study showed improved sleep efficiency in adults >50 yo vs. controls • No changes seen in total sleep time or sleep architecture • No changes seen in patients without insomnia • 0.3 mg effective and resulted in peak concentrations similar to young adult peaks
Melatonin and Insomnia • One study showed improved sleep efficiency in adults >50 yo vs. controls • No changes seen in total sleep time or sleep architecture • No changes seen in patients without insomnia • 0.3 mg effective and resulted in peak concentrations similar to young adult peaks
Melatonin and Insomnia • One study showed improved sleep efficiency in adults >50 yo vs. controls • No changes seen in total sleep time or sleep architecture • No changes seen in patients without insomnia • 0.3 mg effective and resulted in peak concentrations similar to young adult peaks
Melatonin and Sleep Architecture • No consistent changes in sleep architecture • Unlike hypnotic medications used to promote sleep, subjects reported they could fight off sleep if they wanted to • In addition, no reports of cognitive impairment in the morning
Ramelteon (Rozerem) • Synthetic melatonin agonist that acts at MT1 and MT2 receptors • Approved for treatment of insomnia • No potential for abuse
Melatonin and Phase Shifting • At night, advances the clock. In early AM, delays clock • If given at 5PM, can advance nighttime melatonin secretion • 0.5 mg can also shift body temperature rhythms • Can also entrain rhythms in blind individuals who did not have endogenous rhythms
Melatonin and jet lag • Especially useful for Eastbound travel • Shown effective if taken at bedtime of destination when crossing >5 time zones. • Improved total sleep time • Less effective westbound • Adverse effects include dizziness, headache, decreased appetite, daytime sleepiness
Other uses of melatonin • Although thought to have antioxidant properties and thus useful for atherosclereosis, cancer, and Alzheimer’s, no controlled clinical data supports this. • In vitro studies needed concentrations 1000 to 100,000 times normal levels • At such levels, may impair sleep and circadian rhythms by desensitization
Other uses of melatonin • No improvement in cognitive impairment in Alzheimer’s patients • No evidence as helpful for anti-aging • Small studies suggest melatonin may reduce blood pressure
Adverse Effects • Daytime sleepiness, Hypothermia • Desensitzation of melatonin receptors if doses too high • Possible adverse events in those with seizure disorders • Possible interaction with those taking coumadin/warfarin
Conclusions • For problems of sleep efficiency (such as age-related insomnia), melatonin starting at 0.3 mg. If no effect after a week, can double dosage. • If initial response but stops being effective after a few weeks, recommend “drug holiday”
Conclusions • For traveling > 5 time zones, take melatonin at bedtime of destination up to 4 days after arrival • May also consider for travel < 5 time zones if jet lag would be serious interference • 0.3 to 0.5 mg recommended starting dose
Conclusions • Effectiveness may depend on cause of sleep problems • Must be aware of different forms of packaging and dosing • Inform physicians if interested in a trial of melatonin