What
Is Melatonin?
December 18, 2013
Melatonin is a hormone produced naturally by the pineal gland in
response to darkness. Levels remain high during sleep until the pineal gland
tapers off production in response to light.
Melatonin's effects on sleep, other hormones and cancer are
the reason it has been studied ever since its discovery in the 1950s. In the
mid-1990s, synthetic melatonin became available as a nutritional supplement.
Melatonin
supplements are often recommended for sleep problems involving sleep cycles,
such as jet lag or irregular night shift work. Melatonin supplements are
also recommended for sleep disorders due to side effects from beta-blockers
(blood pressure medication), from stopping benzodiazepine drugs or from
quitting smoking. Melatonin may also be given for insomnia linked to attention
deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and autism in children.
People
who have trouble sleeping typically have low levels of melatonin, so melatonin
supplements seem like a logical fix for insomnia. There is a high demand for sleep aids,
especially in the U.S. The National Health Interview Survey done in 2002, and
again in 2007, found 1.6 million US adults were using complementary and
alternative sleep aids for insomnia. Melatonin was a top choice.
However melatonin dose more than influence sleep. Melatonin also
regulates the start of menstruation, the length of ovulation cycles and
menopause, according to the University of Maryland Medical Center. Melatonin
supplements are purported to help bone loss and menopause symptoms.
Melatonin
levels are also linked to cancer in various ways. Women with breast cancer
typically have lower levels of melatonin than women who don't have it,
according to the University of Maryland Medical Center. Similarly, men with
prostate cancer typically have lower melatonin levels than men without prostate
cancer. Some studies show shift-workers with irregular sleep schedules have an
increased risk of cancer, according to the American Cancer Society. Melatonin
may also have antioxidant effects and stimulate white blood cells, which attack
cancer cells.
Occasionally,
melatonin is used as a complementary medicine in cancer treatment for breast,
brain, lung, prostate, head and neck, or gastrointestinal cancer. Melatonin is
sometimes used to mitigate the side effects of chemotherapy including weight
loss, nerve pain, weakness and a condition called thrombocytopenia.
A
variety of other conditions are purported to benefit from melatonin supplements
including Alzheimer’s disease, tinnitus, depression, chronic fatigue syndrome,
fibromyalgia, migraine, irritable bowel syndrome and epilepsy.
Supplement
makers now market melatonin in pill, liquid, chewable or lozenge form.
Melatonin supplements are sold doses that can range from 1 to10 milligrams.
Some dietary supplements contain so-called melatonin precursors, which are
converted into melatonin in the body.
Does melatonin work?
Melatonin
is likely effective for several sleep issues, research shows. Studies show
melatonin can encourage sleep in children who suffer from insomnia related to
autism, mental retardation and other central nervous system disorders,
according to the National Institutes of Health. In 2001, double-blind study of
20 children with developmental disabilities showed all but two children fell
asleep faster when taking melatonin compared with a placebo. However, melatonin
did not change how long the children slept once they fell asleep, according to
the paper published in the Journal of Child Neurology. Melatonin is also likely
effective for treating an irregular sleep cycles in blind people.
Evidence
is promising, but weaker, for melatonin's effectiveness in helping people with
many other conditions. Melatonin may possibly be effective for cluster headaches,
especially when taken in nightly doses of at least 10 milligrams, according to
the National Institutes of Health. A movement disorder called tardive
dyskinesia may be helped by melatonin. Additionally, melatonin may decrease sunburn
when applied to the skin as a cream before sun exposure.
Melatonin
may also be effective for jet lag, especially
in preventing daytime sleepiness when taken to fall asleep earlier at night,
and it may shorten the time it takes to fall asleep. However, a systematic
review of studies on melatonin and sleep disorders found melatonin supplements
shorten the time it takes people to fall asleep faster by only about 12
minutes, according to the paper published in 2005 in the Journal of General
Internal Medicine.
There
is some evidence that melatonin may help cancer medications fight tumors and
decrease the side effects of cancer treatment. One study of cells in a test
tube found melatonin reduced the growth of slowly-metastatic breast cancer
cells, meaning cancer cells that slowly start to spread to other types of
tissue. Melatonin also reduced the growth of non-metastatic breast cancer cells,
according to the paper published in 2001 in the journal
Bioelectromagnetics.
However,
the majority of evidence on melatonin and cancer has been done in relatively
small studies, according to the American Cancer Society. More research needs to
be done on effects of melatonin in cancer treatment or prevention.
There
is a lack of evidence about whether melatonin is effective for many of the
conditions it's purported to treat. Migraines and other headaches may not
respond to melatonin, nor may fibromyalgia, menopausal symptoms, osteoporosis,
irritable bowel syndrome or tinnitus.
Preliminary
research has shown melatonin supplements may help sleep problems in older
adultswho are stopping benzodiazepines. But studies have shown melatonin is
less likely to be effective in changing sleep schedules for people doing shift
work. Melatonin is also likely ineffective for depression, and may actually
worsen depression symptoms in some people.
Are melatonin supplements safe?
Melatonin
is likely safe for most people when taken for a short-term, studies show.
However melatonin may cause side effects including headache, daytime
sleepiness, short-lived depression symptoms, stomach cramps, dizziness and
irritability.
Melatonin
supplements should be avoided in pregnancy, during breastfeeding or when trying
to conceive. Children or adolescents should not use melatonin supplements as
melatonin may interact with other hormones and interfere with their
development.
There
is some evidence that melatonin acts as an antioxidant, so it may interfere
with some cancer treatments, according to the American Cancer Society. Patients
currently undergoing cancer treatment should speak with their doctors before
taking melatonin supplements.
Melatonin
may increase the strength of the immune system, which can cause problems for
people with severe allergies, rheumatoid arthritis, lymphoma and other
conditions linked to overactive immune systems, according to the American
Cancer Society. People with immune system disorders should speak with a doctor
before taking melatonin supplements as melatonin may weaken the effectiveness
of immunosuppressants.
Melatonin
may slow blood clotting, so taking melatonin alongside medications that also
slow blood clotting can lead to excessive bruising or bleeding. Melatonin may
also produce this side effect if taken with herbs that slow blood clotting such
as angelica, clove, danshen, garlic, ginger, ginkgo, Panax ginseng, red clover
and willow.
Several
drugs and treatments may interact with melatonin. Birth control increases
melatonin levels in the body, so taking melatonin supplements may cause high
melatonin levels. Taking melatonin supplements alongside sedatives such as
benzodiazepines may cause excessive sleepiness.
The
drug fluvoxamine can increase the amount of melatonin absorbed by the body,
therefore enhancing the effects and side effects of melatonin supplements.
Similarly, melatonin will enhance herbs with sedative effects such as calamus,
California poppy, catnip, hops, Jamaican dogwood, kava, St. John's wort,
skullcap, valerian and yerba mansa.
Melatonin
may increase blood sugar, therefore decreasing the effectiveness of diabetes medications
to lower blood sugar. Melatonin may also constrict blood vessels, which could
be dangerous for people with high blood pressure or heart disease.
Supplements
that contain melatonin precursors, such as L-tryptophan and 5-HTP, have not
been proven effective in treating insomnia, and there are safety concerns that
they may be linked to debilitating condition called eosinophilia-myalgia
syndrome (EMS).
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