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Melatonin
Browse Sections:
 Summary
 Other Names
 Traditional Internal Uses
 Indications
 Actions
 Pharmacological Summary
 Precautions / Contraindications
 Interaction with Medications
 Possible Side Effects
 Dosage
 References

Common Name
Melatonin
 
Botanical Latin Name / Classification
N-acetyl-5-methoxtryptamine-synthetic
 
Other Names
Circadin, Melatol, MEL

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Traditional Internal Uses
Sublingual melatonin is used for several reasons, as follows:

- to improve the quality of sleep in those with an age-related decline in melatonin;(1);
- to reestablish a normal circadian sleep rhythm in those suffering from disturbed sleep patterns relating to jet lag, shift-work, and in delayed sleep phase syndrome (DSPS);(1)
- in circadian rhythm disorders in the blind, in sleep disturbances relating to depression, Alzheimer's Disease, and relating to benzodiazepine and nicotine withdrawal.(1)

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Indications
Depression, Immunity / Immune Disorders, Jet Lag, Sleep Disorders, Tumors

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Actions
Sedative

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Pharmacological Summary
Melatonin is a neuro-hormone produced in the pineal gland located in the center of the brain and is associated with inducing a sedative effect. During conditions of dim light, special retinal photoreceptors spontaneously release norepinephrine, activating neural pathways that run to the pineal gland, through the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) in the hypothalamus, resulting in pineal synthesis of melatonin, and its passive diffusive secretion into the bloodstream.(23) However, light of sufficient intensity reaching the retinal tissues hyperpolarizes these special photoreceptors, preventing pineal melatonin synthesis.(23) The photoreceptors mediating this process are different from the rod and cone photoreceptors that produce colour and light perception.(24) Some blind people who evidence no pupillary light reflexes or visual perception still have light-induced suppression of melatonin synthesis.(23,25)

Most aspects of physiology and behavior are time-integrated by sensitive biological clock mechanisms centered in the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) of the hypothalamus, which acts on neural and endocrine pathways to regulate a variety of different circadian rhythms so that internal states vary predictably over a 24-hour cycle.(26) (The word circadian is made up of two Latin roots; circa = about, and diem = day). The suprachiasmatic nuclei are comprised of approximately 10,000 neurons and if these nuclei are destroyed, the ability to express overt circadian rhythms is destroyed.(27,28) The circadian mechanisms associated with the SCN are autonomous, and individual neurons from the SCN demonstrate clock regulation that is so powerful that the rhythms of a single neuron can be recorded continuously for several weeks with only the slightest deviation from a 24 hour cycle.(26,29) In terms of hypothalamic SCN sleep regulation, most people achieve a satisfactory sleep-wake circadian rhythm over each 24-hour day.

However, due to age-related decline in endogenous melatonin synthesis, jet travel over time zones, or shift work, a discrepancy can arise between the established biological "sense" of time, and the actual local time. Such desynchronization causes the biological clock to impose a sleep-wake rhythm that is out of synch with local time, resulting in sleep deficits and numerous minor physiological and psychological complaints.(30) A condition of chronic desynchronization that typically requires clinical management is delayed sleep-phase syndrome (DSPS). In this condition, the person is unable to attain sleep in the common nocturnal time-rame because the SCN clock delays the sleep phase of the sleep-wake rhythm until 2 AM to 3 AM. Clinicians observe that the sleep duration [say 7-8 hours] and quality [required sleep stages are achieved] in DSPS are considered to be normal. Thus, the point of awakening is correspondingly delayed [shifted forward by approximately 4 hours] until around 11 AM. Patients with DSPS usually find it difficult to function well if they are required to rise in the early hours of the morning.

Melatonin is thought to act in at least two ways in relation to maintaining a restful sleep pattern. Firstly, melatonin is known to produce a sedative effect in animals and humans. This sedative effect is thought to stem from enhanced gamma aminobenzoic acid (GABA) receptor binding, producing an inhibitory action on the reticular activating system, which mediates wakefulness.(31-33) Melatonin is necessary to turn-down imposed wakefulness, but such sedation is not sufficient for the establishment of sleep. Sleep like wakefulness is imposed, but by another set of neurological properties mediated by the SCN circadian clock governing the sleep-wake rhythm. A rising melatonin plasma level commensurate with room darkness facilitates the onset of sedation, and this presumably matches a mounting SCN clock commitment to impose sleep. The second way melatonin acts to ensure a restful sleep pattern pertains to SCN clock synchronization. As the seasonal dark-light pattern varies throughout the year, the SCN clock must adapt to the way sleep requirements change in real time. Endogenous melatonin is thought to act as an entrainment agent to accomplish this adaptation.(3,34,35)

Entrainment is the complex process of re-synchronizing the biological clock with real time. Critical incremental changes in dim light timing, serve as entrainment information for re-setting the clock. The SCN neurons are able to decipher the trending darkness pattern, mirrored in the corresponding dark-mediated melatonin plasma levels. SCN neurons continuously perceive shifts in melatonin as a function of the dark-light cycle, adapting the clock imposed sleep-wake rhythm throughout the year accordingly.

Desynchronization is a condition of failed adaptation and is represented in the concept of a phase-shift. In other words, the sleep-phase of the sleep-wake circadian rhythm has been shifted to another time that is out of synch with real time. Usually the sleep-phase is pushed or shifted forward, meaning sleep is postponed or delayed. The overt use of exogenous melatonin can induce entrainment to correct for desynchronization.(17,34-36) Such entrainment may provide completely satisfactory management of jet-lag, shift work, or more challenging sleep aberrations as seen in DSPS, depression, or Alzheimer's disease. In more challenging categories, physician or pharmacist guidance may be more appropriate than self-medication alone.

Melatonin showed that it can entrain the free-running circadian rhythms of blind people and it has been used to treat the symptoms of circadian maladaptation associated with delayed sleep-phase syndrome.(17,35,36) Dagan et. al. described the results of a 6-week clinical trial using 5 mg of melatonin for treating 61 DSPS patients.(17) The mean duration of sleep before treatment was 8 hours and 21 minutes, demonstrating that delayed sleep-phase syndrome is not about the lack of sleep but rather about the timing of sleep onset. The mean pretreatment sleep onset and waking times were respectively 3:09 AM and 11:31 AM. Melatonin was administered at 10:00 PM, five hours before the average pretreatment sleep onset time. A survey of the patients was conducted between 12 and 18 months after the 6-week melatonin treatment ended. The response rate was 59 of the 61 original patients. Of this 59 patients, 54 (91.5%) reported relapse to their pretreatment sleeping patterns within one year after stopping the melatonin treatment. However, 17 (28.8%) respondents reported that their relapse occurred within one week of discontinuing melatonin. Dagan and his fellow investigators stated that their findings confirm earlier evidence that melatonin was effective in changing the sleep-wake patterns of DSPS patients. However, the finding that the new sleep patterns were not permanently retained suggests that exogenous melatonin does not cause a fundamental and permanent change in sleep regulation, thus DSPS patients may need to use melatonin on a regular basis.(17)

Lewy and fellow investigators generated a phase-response curve (PRC) to melatonin that demonstrated circadian phase advances when melatonin is administrated in the late afternoon and evening, and circadian phase delays when it is administrated in the later hours of sleep and the morning.(36) Their observations offer some basis on how to empirically time a melatonin dose in DSPS, but also in better managing sleep problems associated with shift work and on going episodes of jet lag.

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Precautions / Contraindications
Precautions

Driving Performance:

The impact of melatonin use on driving performance remains a central concern. One published investigation was conducted by the University of Zurich Travel Clinic, in the Institute of Social and Preventative Medicine.(19) Researchers investigated the effects of melatonin on driving performance parameters in 20 men and women aged 21-57 years. On each testing day, subjects received 5 mg or placebo, taken at 4:30 PM. One hour later, a test series was performed consisting of a medical examination, body sway measurement, and a standardized driving computer test battery to assess attention, reaction time, power of concentration, and sensomotor coordination. Sleepiness of the subjects was measured on three occasions during each test session using the Stanford Sleepiness Scale questionnaire.

Results:

In assessing the results, the investigators reported that only one of the 16 main variables of the driving computer test battery (selective attention tested by signal-detection) was significantly affected by melatonin. However, even those values were still within normal range. Subjective sleepiness was increased by melatonin, although this affect became significant only after the prolonged concentration task. Neither the medical examination nor the body sway test demonstrated signs of drug influence.

Conclusion:

The researchers concluded that overall the results of the computer test battery demonstrated no objective adverse impact of melatonin on driving performance. However, due to the increased subjective sleepiness after administration of melatonin, caution should be exercised when driving under the influence of melatonin.

Melatonin may cause epileptic seizure in the susceptible. Dopamine is considered an endogenous down-regulator of seizure activity and melatonin is capable of causing a decrease in dopamine output within areas of the brain thought to participate in the control of epileptic seizure.(20) Melatonin is an effective treatment for biological rhythm related insomnia, but it is not necessarily an effective treatment for psycho physiologically related insomnia.(17)

Contraindications

Melatonin is not to be used by people with seizure disorders, during pregnancy or the breast-feeding period, or together with sedatives, or immuno-suppressive drugs. Do not operate a motor vehicle or machinery for at least 3 hours after taking any kind of melatonin-based products.

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Interaction with Medications
Melatonin may interact adversely when used in combination with medications for improving sleep. One study found a combination of melatonin and zolpidem had reports of nausea, vomiting, amnesia, and somnambulia (sleep-walking) to the point of incapacitation.(15) Melatonin may potentiate the anticoagulant and antiplatelet actions of medications or herbs used to modulate blood clotting.(1) Melatonin may have the ability in diabetic patients to impair glucose utilization and increase insulin resistance.(1)

Because contraceptive drugs can elevate endogenous melatonin, concomitant use of melatonin could be associated with melatonin adverse effects.(1) Flumazenil can inhibit the effect of melatonin.(1) Fluvoxamine significantly inhibits the elimination of melatonin.(21) In one study, a 17-fold higher (P<.05) area under the concentration-time curve and a 12-fold higher (P<.01) serum peak concentration of melatonin was found.(21)

Melatonin can decrease the effectiveness of Nifedipine GITS monotherapy in the modulation of blood pressure.(22) Lusardi et. al. found in a placebo-controlled, double-blind, and cross-over study with 47 well controlled mild to moderate hypertensive patients on 30-60 mg daily of Nifedipine GITS, that when 5 mg of melatonin was added nightly over 4 weeks, there was a daily average increase in systolic blood pressure of 6.5 mmHg and in diastolic blood pressure of 4.9 mmHg, with an average increase in heart rate of 3.9 beats per minute. The DBP and HR were particularly evident during the morning and the afternoon hours.

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Possible Side Effects
The administration of melatonin is usually well tolerated, but it can be associated with mild adverse effects. Dollins et. al. using higher than normal doses of 10, 20, 40 or 80 mg in 20 healthy males found that all doses compared to placebo significantly decreased oral temperature, the number of correct responses in auditory vigilance, response latency in reaction time, and self reported vigor.(12) Other reports include headache, transient depressive symptoms, fatigue, confusion, drowsiness, mild tremor, mild anxiety, dizziness, and abdominal cramps.(1,12-17)

Dagan et. al. found in a six-week treatment course with 61 DSPS patients, using 5 mg at 10 pm, that 57.4 percent reported no adverse effects, 34.4 percent reported slight daytime fatigue, and 8.2 percent reported headaches and nausea.(17)

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Dosage
Use 1 tablet sublingually at bedtime, or as directed by a physician. Use up to 3 tablets daily.
The sublingual route compared to the oral route is expected to provide a more consistent bioavailability of melatonin.

Early pharmacokinetic studies indicated that 30 to 60 percent of an oral dose is metabolized during the first pass in the liver.(2) Furthermore, absorption of melatonin via the gut is thought to be highly variable.(3) One investigation using 80 mg in gelatin capsule form administered to 5 young males demonstrated a 25-fold variation in the concentrationtime curve (350 to10,000 times higher than the usual nocturnal peak).(4)

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References
1. Jellin, J.M., et al, Pharmacist's Letter/Prescriber's Letter Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database, 6th ed., Stockton, CA: Therapeutic Research Faculty, 2004
2. Lane, E.A., Moss, H.B., Pharmacokinetics of metabolism in man: first pass hepatic metabolism, J Clin Endocrinol Metab, 61:1214-1216, 1985
3. Kovacs, Jozsef, et al, Measurement of urinary melatonin: a useful tool for moniting serum melatonin after its oral administration, J Clin Endocrinology Metabolism, 85(2):666-670, 2000
4. Waldhauser, F., et al, Bioavailability of oral melatonin in humans, Neuroendocrinology, Oct; 39(4):307-313, 1984
5. Forrester, M.B., Melatonin exposures reported to Texas poison centers in 1998-2003, Vet Hum Toxicol, Dec; 46(6):345-346, 2004
6. Gupta, M., et al, Effects of add-on melatonin administration on antioxidant enzymes in children with epilepsy taking carbamazepine monotherapy: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, Epilepsia, Dec; 45(12):1636-1639, 2004
7. Gupta, M., Add-on melatonin improves quality of life in epileptic children on valproate monotherapy: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, Epilepsy Behav, Jun; 5(3):316-321, 2004
8. Phillips, L., R.E. Appleton, Systematic review of melatonin treatment in children with neurodevelopmental disabilities and sleep impairment, Dev Med Child Neurol, Nov, 46(11):771-775, 2004 (Review) 9. Coppola, G., Melatonin in wake-sleep disorders in children, adolescents and young adults with mental retardation with or without epilepsy: a doubleblind, cross-over, placebo-controlled trial, Brain Dev, Sep; 26(6):373-376, 2004
10. Smits, M.G., et al, Melatonin for chronic sleep onset insomnia in children: a randomized placebo-controlled trial, J Child Neurol, Feb; 16(2):86-92, 2001
11. Dodge, N.N., G.A. Wilson, Melatonin for treatment of sleep disorders in children with developmental disabilities, J Child Neurol, Aug; 16(8):581-584, 2001
12. Dollins, A.B., et al, Effect of pharmacological daytime doses of melatonin on human mood and performance, Psychopharmacol, 112:490-496, 1993
13. Wagner, J., et al, Beyond benzodiazepines: alternative pharmacologic agents for the treatment of insomnia, Ann Pharmacother, 32:680-691, 1998
14. Nishiyama,K., et al, Acute effects of melatonin administration on cardiovascular autonomic regulation in healthy men, Am Heart J, 141:E9, 2001
15. Suhner, A., et al, Comparative study to determine the optimal melatonin dosage form for alleviation of jetlag, Chronobiol Int, 15(2):655-666, 1998 16. Citera G., et al, The effect of melatonin in patients with fibromyalgia: a pilot study, Clin Rheumatol, 19:9-13, 2000
17. Dagan, Y., et al, Evaluating the role of melatonin in the long-term treatment of delayed sleep phase syndrome(DSPS), Chronobiol Int, 15(2):181-190, 1998
18. Weaver, D.R., Reproductive safety of melatonin: a "wonder drug" to wonder about, J Biol Rhythms, Dec; 12(6):682-689, 1997
19. Suhner, A., et al, Impact of melatonin on driving performance, J Travel Med, Mar; 5(1):7-13, 1998
20. Steward, L.S., Endogenous melatonin and epileptogenesis: facts and hypothesis, Int J Neurosci, Mar; 107(1-2):77-85, 2001
21. Hartter, S., et aql, Increased bioavailability of oral melatonin after fluvoxamine coadministration, Clin Pharmacol Ther, Jan; 67(1):1-6, 2000
22. Lusardi, P., et al, Cardiovascular effects of melatonin in hypertensive patients well controlled by nifedipine: a 24-hour study, Br J Clin Pharmacol, May; 49(5):423-427, 2000
23. Brzezinski, A., Melatonin in humans, N Eng J Med, Jan; 16, 336(3):186-195, 1997
24. Kavita, Thapan, et al, An action potential for melatonin suppression: evidence for a novel non-rod, non-cone photoreceptor system in humans, J Physiology, 535(1):261-267, 2001
25. Czeisler, C. A., et al, Suppression of melatonin secretion in some blind patients by exposure to bright light, N Eng J Med, 332:6-11, 1995
26. Hastings, Michael, The brain, circadian rhythms, and clock genes, BMJ, 317:1704-7, 1998
27. Hastings, Michael, Central Clocking, Trends Neurosci, 20:459-464, 1997
28. Kline, D.C.,, Moore, R.E., Reppert, S.M., Suprachiasmatic Nucleus: The Mind's Clock, Oxford University Press, New York, 1991
29. Welsh, D.K., et al, Individual neurons dissociated from rat suprachiasmatic nucleus express independently phased circadian firing rhythms, Neuron, 14:697-706, 1995

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Botanical Latin Name: N-acetyl-5-methoxtryptamine-synthetic
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These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Products are intended to support general well being and are not intended to treat, diagnose, mitigate, prevent, or cure any condition or disease. If conditions persist, please seek advice from your medical doctor.



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