Sleep Disorders: How and When Melatonin Can Help
Sleep disorders are tough—really tough. They are pretty complicated, too, unfortunately. For example, insomnia can mean difficulty getting to sleep, staying asleep, waking too early from sleep, or just not feeling refreshed after a full night’s sleep. First, let’s briefly go over the classification of sleep (and wakefulness) disorders.
Sleep and Wakefulness Disorders
If you go through the Merck Manual—one of the world’s most trusted sources of medical information—you will find that sleep and wakefulness disorders come in a variety of forms.(1)
- Circadian Rhythm Sleep Disorders: Melatonin, sometimes at specific times, may be very useful in these disorders.
- Circadian or daily sleep disorders occur because of a disconnect between the internal sleep/wake and light/dark rhythms controlled in large part by melatonin.
- These disorders include jet lag, shift work disorder, and altered sleep phase type disorders.
- Jet lagoccurs with travel across 2 or more time zones with eastward travel causing the most serious problems.
- Shift workdisorder occurs when someone works the 2nd or 3rd shifts and can be worsened by frequent shift changes, number of nights working, how long the shifts are, and how often counterclockwise (nightà eveningàday) shift changes occur.
- Altered sleep phase disordersindicate a sleep-wake cycle out of phase or unlinked from the light-dark cycle. The phase shift can be delayed or advanced. Another type, most experienced in the blind, is non-24-hour sleep-wake syndrome.
- Generalized Insomnias: Various forms of insomnias are often treated with a combination of cognitive-behavioral treatments (CBT) to improve sleep hygiene and sleep habits, and with short-term medications. Some may be responsive to melatonin. Melatonin, however should be combined with good sleep hygiene and habits to work most effectively. In other words—melatonin won’t help you as much if you drink coffee just before bedtime, have an irregular sleep schedule or decide to do a vigorous work-out right before bedtime. Insomnias, defined above, can be further divided into:
- Poor sleep hygieneusually involves drinking coffee or other stimulants too close to bedtime, too much excitement in the evening (going out, watching a stimulating show or movie), or, more simply, irregular sleep schedules.
- Adjustment insomniamay be due to acute emotional stressors such as a death, a new job, loss of a job, and others.
- Psychophysiologic insomniausually involves anxiety and/or worry over getting to sleep or sleeplessness issues and is usually treated with a combination of CBT with short-term use of medication to aid sleep.
- Physical sleep disordersare caused by physical conditions that cause pain, discomfort, or are characterized by seizures.
- Mental health disorderssuch as depression, anxiety, seasonal affective disorder (SAD), and others can cause insomnia.
- Drug-related insomniasmay be caused by prescribed medications, the withdrawal of prescribed medications, and by the use of stimulants such as caffeine or amphetamines.
There are more sleep disorders—including Restless Leg Syndrome (RLS), Periodic Limb Movement Disorder (PLMD), narcolepsy, and parasomnias, but these are generally unresponsive to melatonin treatments.
Basics of Sleep Hygiene
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has a brief set of sleep hygiene rules:(2)
- “Be consistent. Go to bed at the same time each night and get up at the same time each morning, including on the weekends;
- Make sure your bedroom is quiet, dark, relaxing, and at a comfortable temperature;
- Remove electronic devices, such as TVs, computers, and smartphones, from the bedroom;
- Avoid large meals, caffeine, and alcohol before bedtime;
- Get some exercise. Being physically active during the day can help you fall asleep more easily at night.”
Following these rules can help you sleep better. If you follow these rules AND supplement with melatonin if indicated, you are likely to sleep better, longer, and sooner than if you just try melatonin alone. We are living in a culture of “there’s a pill for that!” but it is rarely quite that simple. Take dieting for example—for a diet to be truly successful in the long term, you need to reduce your calorie intake, increase your calorie burning, AND eat healthy foods that support a healthy weight. Doing one or two of these things may help in the short term but won’t do that much in the long term. Similarly, melatonin alone may help you sleep better in the short term, but if you keep an irregular sleep schedule or don’t have a period of darkness or dimmed light before sleep, the melatonin isn’t as likely to be as helpful.
What Sleep Disorders Can Melatonin be Used to Support?
Melatonin can be used to support sleep, but there are some important things for you to know. First, the dosage can range from less than 1 mg to several mg. As a general rule, start with the lowest dose possible, and if that dose is ineffective, slowly increase it.
There are very few side effects to using melatonin—the most common “side effect” is drowsiness! Timing can be important in the altered sleep-phase disorders, as you will see. But in this statement from a review of melatonin use in sleep disorders, research on melatonin has a long way to go:
“Melatonin supplementation has been shown to be a safe and effective method to improve sleep onset latency, duration, and quality in children, adolescents, older adults, and postmenopausal women. Furthermore, consistent melatonin use produces a very low rebound rate.”(3)
In generalized insomnia—that is insomnia that is not phase altered (see below), a person can benefit by taking 1-3 mg of melatonin about 2 hours before you want to go to bed. Practice healthy sleep hygiene as well. So, you may want to consider taking your melatonin, turning down the lights, avoiding electronic media and listen to calming music, read a book or just sit back and relax a bit. Also, remember to keep your bedroom as dark, cool, and quiet as possible.
Insomnia can have many “faces”. It is the most common sleep disorder and can be short-term or long-term. Long-term insomnia can be associated with obesity, heart disease, aging, poor work/school performance, high blood pressure, and mood disorders. It is very common in postmenopausal women, the elderly, in those with flexible work schedules and during times of stress. It can also be caused by medication, pain, use of stimulants, eating too much too late in the evening, and the constant late-night use of electronic devices.
General insomnia is usually treated with a combination of CBT, improvement in sleep hygiene, and melatonin. Sleep medications are less used—and used for shorter periods of time because of the risk of abuse, tolerance, and misuse.(4)
To prevent jet lag, try starting to take melatonin about 2 hours before your preferred bedtime at your destination for about 2-3 days before you leave. Let’s say you live on the West Coast, and your normal bedtime is 10pm. Your destination is Istanbul Turkey, 11 hours ahead. In this case, you would start taking 1-3 mg melatonin at around 8pm in Istanbul-time. That converts to 9am, PST. Be aware that this may make you drowsy while still on the west coast—so get your bags packed already!
In Delayed Sleep-Wake Phase Sleep Disorder (DSWPSD), the individual generally goes to sleep late and gets up late. This is not like generalized insomnia because you don’t have trouble falling asleep or staying asleep—you just shift your sleep schedule, so it is later than most. However, DSWPSD can look like insomnia because if you have to be at work at a specific time—before you would normally wake—you still will lose total sleep time. Also, it may look like insomnia because you will have difficulty falling asleep if you try to go to bed before you would normally and consequently may have trouble falling asleep. In DSWPSD, if you take melatonin starting about 2 hours before your new earlier bedtime, you can, over a period of time, shift back into a more normal sleep pattern. There may be a period of trial and error before you find the right time and the right dosage you need to nudge you back into a pattern that works best for you. Some physicians may start by having you take melatonin at 30 minutes, 1 hour, 1.5 hour and 2 hours before your desired bedtime, with the timing changed over a period of weeks. This is best discussed with your own physician and pharmacist. Following healthy sleep hygiene guidelines in addition to using melatonin will benefit you as well and possibly speed up or ease the entire process.(5)(6)
Advanced Sleep-Wake Phase Sleep Disorder (ASWPSD) is a sleep disorder where people tend to want to go to sleep early (between 6-9pm) and tend to get up early (between 2-5 am). The sleep itself is normal and refreshing, just “out-of-sync”. It is much less common than DSWPSD. It is usually not treated with melatonin but treated with bright light therapy during evening hours in an effort to try and reset the body clock. There IS, however, a rationale, according to an American Academy of Sleep review, to use low-dose melatonin immediately after early-morning awakening to slowly shift the melatonin levels. There have been no clinical trials of this approach.(7)
Takeaways
We know that melatonin is safe to use over a wide range of doses (0.1-10mg/day). We also know that some forms of sleep disorders respond well to melatonin. The response to melatonin may depend on a large number of factors such as age, how melatonin is delivered, its bioavailability, and overall health. The response also depends on the type of sleep disorder—DSWPSD, jet lag, and general insomnia appear to respond better to melatonin than do ASWPSD and other sleep disorders.
However—as was stated in a recent review of sleep disorders and melatonin, “We found that over the past 5 years, melatonin has not been widely investigated in clinical studies thus there remains large gaps in its potential utilization as a therapy.”(8) Large gaps—meaning we don’t really know the optimal dose of melatonin for the specific form of sleep disorder, we don’t really understand the timing of melatonin in disorders like insomnia and DSWPSD and even less in ASWPSD. We DO know that combining sleep hygiene protocols along with light therapy for DSWPSD and CBT for insomnia works better than melatonin alone.
There is much research yet to be done on how best to use melatonin for sleep. Until we know more, the best advice is to work closely with your physician, implement improved sleep hygiene, consider trying CBT and light therapy…and relax and de-stress your life as much as you can!
Resources:
- https://www.merckmanuals.com/home/brain,-spinal-cord,-and-nerve-disorders/sleep-disorders
- https://www.cdc.gov/sleep/about_sleep/sleep_hygiene.html
- Xie, Z. et al. A review of sleep disorders and melatonin. Neurological Res. 39(6), 559-565, 2017.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/citedby/10.1080/01616412.2017.1315864?scroll=top&needAccess=true
- Sweetman A, Knieriemen A, Hoon E, Frank O, Stocks N, Natsky A, Kaambwa B, Vakulin A, Lovato N, Adams R, Lack L, Miller CB, Espie CA, McEvoy RD. Implementation of a digital cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia pathway in primary care. Contemp Clin Trials. 2021 Aug;107:106484. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2021.106484. Epub 2021 Jun 12. PMID: 34129952.https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34129952/
- Auger RR, Burgess HJ, Emens JS, Deriy LV, Thomas SM, Sharkey KM. Clinical Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Intrinsic Circadian Rhythm Sleep-Wake Disorders: Advanced Sleep-Wake Phase Disorder (ASWPD), Delayed Sleep-Wake Phase Disorder (DSWPD), Non-24-Hour Sleep-Wake Rhythm Disorder (N24SWD), and Irregular Sleep-Wake Rhythm Disorder (ISWRD). An Update for 2015: An American Academy of Sleep Medicine Clinical Practice Guideline. J Clin Sleep Med. 2015 Oct 15;11(10):1199-236. doi: 10.5664/jcsm.5100. PMID: 26414986; PMCID: PMC4582061.https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26414986/
- Sletten TL, Magee M, Murray JM, Gordon CJ, Lovato N, Kennaway DJ, Gwini SM, Bartlett DJ, Lockley SW, Lack LC, Grunstein RR, Rajaratnam SMW; Delayed Sleep on Melatonin (DelSoM) Study Group. Efficacy of melatonin with behavioural sleep-wake scheduling for delayed sleep-wake phase disorder: A double-blind, randomised clinical trial. PLoS Med. 2018 Jun 18;15(6):e1002587. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002587. PMID: 29912983; PMCID: PMC6005466. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29912983/
- Sack RL, Auckley D, Auger RR, Carskadon MA, Wright KP Jr, Vitiello MV, Zhdanova IV; American Academy of Sleep Medicine. Circadian rhythm sleep disorders: part II, advanced sleep phase disorder, delayed sleep phase disorder, free-running disorder, and irregular sleep-wake rhythm. An American Academy of Sleep Medicine review. Sleep. 2007 Nov;30(11):1484-501. doi: 10.1093/sleep/30.11.1484. PMID: 18041481; PMCID: PMC2082099.https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18041481/
- Vasey, C.; McBride, J.; Penta, K. Circadian Rhythm Dysregulation and Restoration: The Role of Melatonin. Nutrients 2021, 13, 3480.https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13103480 https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/13/10/3480/htm