The Real Deal About Melatonin

by Guest@Zeo on January 19, 2012

in Featured Blogger,Sleep Products

This is the third post from Doug S. of Build Better Sleep, our January Featured Blogger. In this post, Doug dives into the mysteries of melatonin, explaining what it is, how much one should take, and the different sleep issues it could help with.

    Melatonin is one of the more popular and available over-the-counter (OTC) drugs for people to take as a sleep aid. In addition to its use for sleep issues, it is reported to affect maladies as diverse as delirium, fertility, migraine headaches, and cancer among several others.

    Like most sleep aids, I think it’s important to know exactly what it is before we go ingesting it.

    The Basics of Melatonin

    Melatonin is chemically known as N-acetyl-5-methoxytryptamine, and it occurs naturally in most plant, animals (including us) and microbes. In humans, it’s a product of the pineal gland in the brain, where it is manufactured from the chemical tryptophan (the same stuff you find in your turkey dinner).

    The Chemical Structure of Melatonin


    In mammals, melatonin production is triggered by darkness, and stopped by light. This is why it’s known as the darkness hormone, and why it’s essential for our circadian (day/night) rhythms.

    When researchers examined the actual blood plasma levels of melatonin in humans, however, they discovered levels that are quite low. It normally takes supplementation of 0.3mg to 0.5mg to effect our blood levels at night in a physiologically significant way.

    Unfortunately, the supplements we buy often contain ten times as much as we need – 3mg to 5mg (and often more)!

    The Easy Way to Avoid A Melatonin Overdose

    Studies have shown that too much melatonin can actually be worse for your condition.  On top of that, it has been demonstrated to have no effect whatever at very high (60mg) levels.

    If you are supplementing with melatonin for insomnia, make sure of the dose you are taking. If possible, cut it down to as close to 0.3mg to 0.5mg as you can (I have 5mg pills, so the most I can realistically cut it down to is 2.5mg, which is still too much!).

    If one doesn’t want to pop a pill, new research seems to indicate that drinking tart cherry juice during the day will naturally raise your body’s melatonin levels.  However, this is still under investigation, so proceede with caution and temper expectations.

    Is Melatonin Effective For Sleep?

    Back in the 1990′s, Melatonin hailed as a wonder-drug that could cure almost everything. The hype got so out of hand that the New England Journal of Medicine in 2000 wrote an editorial that said, in part:

    The hype and the claims of the so-called miraculous powers of melatonin several years ago did a great disservice to a scientific field of real importance to human health.

    However, there are a few sleep related areas where melatonin is part of a standard therapy, normally combined with strong lighting in the morning, namely to help correct circadian rhythm disorders or abnormalities brought on by work or travel.

    The 4 major ones that I’ll discuss here are:

    1. Delayed Sleep Phase Syndrome
    2. Non-24-Hour Sleep-Wake Syndrome
    3. Jet Lag
    4. Night Shift Work

    Delayed Sleep Phase Syndrome

    The first disorder is called Delayed Sleep Phase Syndrome, or DSPS. It’s also been known as “social jet lag”, because the symptoms are almost exactly like permanently being 4-6 hour jetlagged. This is where your internal bio-clock is stuck an hour or two (or in severe cases, three or four) too late – you aren’t tired enough to sleep until very late in the evening, and then you have a normal sleep until you are woken up too early for you. If allowed to sleep until rested completely, you would wake up a few hours later than most everyone else.

    The way this problem is resolved is with melatonin timed in the evening a few hours before normal bedtime combined with light therapy in the morning. In most cases, this will slowly synchronize the body clock with the actual one. The melatonin in this case is not used as a hypnotic sleep inducer, but rather as an internal clock changer (chronobiotic).

    Non-24-Hour Sleep-Wake Syndrome

    The second is one called Non-24-Hour Sleep-Wake Syndrome and it sounds particularly nasty.

    It’s when your body clock (circadian rhythm) is offset an hour or two every night, so you feel sleepy an hour later than you did last night, and wake an hour later – and this goes on and on. So you finish a complete “cycle around the clock” every couple of weeks. And then it starts again.

    It’s as though your body takes no cues at all from the time of day that it is – you could be asleep at 5pm and wide awake at 3am. The therapy for this, though, is the same as for DSPS.

    Jet Lag

    Melatonin is also used for jet lag, and is taken to raise blood melatonin levels before your body would naturally produce them – because you’ve just traveled quickly over a few time zones and it normally takes you one day per zone to naturally adjust to the new light-dark cues. Melatonin taken before bed can “jump start” those cues and make adjusting to the new time easier. Note that the dosage becomes important here, as too much can make you drowsy during the day at your destination.

    That said, melatonin’s use for combating jet-lag is controversial. For every study that says it’s effective, there’s another one that says it isn’t. I would say that the only way to tell if it will work for you is to give it a try.

    Night Shift Work

    The final one would be supplementation for night-shift workers. It can be used as a supplement before going to bed because the day-night cues aren’t there, so the blood melatonin levels aren’t either.

    Printed by folks on the night shift at Parlato Design Studio

    But mostly it’s been touted for another reason – night-shift workers tend to work with artificial lighting, and have very low melatonin levels around the clock (because they’re light-dark cues aren’t there).

    Do you blog about sleep?  If so, we want you as our next Zeo Featured BloggerTell us your story today!
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    { 7 comments… read them below or add one }

    1 Adam January 19, 2012 at 6:15 pm

    Interesting article, melatonin never really worked for me, I guess those way too high 5mg doses maybe be to blame!

    Oh, it’s not very nice to not attribute other people’s work and I’m not sure why you would attribute one but not another. Not a huge deal, but here’s the link back to the source for the XKCD comic: http://www.xkcd.com/448/

    Reply

    2 Andi@Zeo January 24, 2012 at 1:23 pm

    Hi Adam,

    Glad you enjoyed the article! It is interesting how much we (perhaps inadvertently) over medicate ourselves just to get a better night’s sleep. One would think that the makers of melatonin tablets would simply lower their dosage so that it’s more in line with what our bodies need, but that’s a whole ‘nother blog post right there.

    Thanks for the xkcd link as well. We usually put them in for all of our images, but sometimes during the editing process WordPress changes the link, destroying the original reference. We’d also never be quite so foolish as to claim Randall Monroe’s genius as our own – and hope that our readers can recognize fandom vs piracy.

    Reply

    3 RRPF January 20, 2012 at 11:16 am

    do you have any other studies regarding effects of large dosages (3mg and over)? The one you linked involved 7 participants who were all blind and the effect mentioned applied to only one of the participants. That’s an interesting choice to link unless the others are even less applicable.

    Reply

    4 Andi@Zeo January 24, 2012 at 1:34 pm

    Hi RRPF,

    Here’s another study regarding the use of 5mg and 10mg dosage of melatonin, which found that there was little difference between the two: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15791928

    For more information on melatonin and other medical studies, I’d advise doing a quick search on PubMed (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/). In addition, PubMed also provides related studies and citations for each article, which can help you dive deeper into a particular issue.

    Reply

    5 RRPF January 20, 2012 at 11:24 am

    I just wanted to add that I don’t disagree with using lower dosages if they are effective. Life Extension offers 0.3mg and 0.5mg capsules and I typically use those on a regular basis outside of occasional use of 3mg dissolved under my tongue for when I want to fall asleep as soon as possible. It would be very interesting if Zeo users compared charts with and without the use of melatonin and perhaps at varying dosages.

    Reply

    6 MHB January 20, 2012 at 2:21 pm

    I have tried melatonin in past but had bad side effects. Maybe due to dosage. What about liquid melatonin? Can level be more easily controlled? How would you implement to wean off sleeping pill?

    Reply

    7 Andi@Zeo January 24, 2012 at 1:39 pm

    Howdy MHB,

    Weaning off sleeping pills – or any medication for that matter – should be done under the guidance and direction of the physician who prescribed the original drug. As such, Zeo and its affiliates can’t offer any dosage or use guidelines.

    However, if your doctor does advocate using melatonin as part of the process, you should take this opportunity to ask them why their recommending this particular hormone and what you should expect during said time. Also, your doctor would be able to give additional advice on how best to take a liquid form of melatonin as well.

    Reply

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