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Repeated melatonin supplementation improves sleep in hypertensive patients treated with beta-blockers: a randomized controlled trial.

Sleep
January 1, 1970
Frank A J L Scheer et al. (8 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, N.I.H., ExtramuralResearch Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.Human StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine whether nightly melatonin supplementation improves sleep quality in hypertensive patients treated with beta-blockers.

Results Summary

Melatonin significantly increased total sleep time, sleep efficiency, and Stage 2 sleep while decreasing sleep onset latency, with a positive carryover effect observed after discontinuation. No rebound sleep disturbance or tolerance was noted.

Population

Hypertensive patients (age 45-64 years, 9 women) treated with beta-blockers (atenolol or metoprolol).

Effective Dosage

2.5 mg nightly

Duration

3 weeks

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (6)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
melatonin supplementation
increase
total sleep time
hypertensive patients treated with beta-blockers
+36 min
significantly increased
#1
melatonin supplementation
increase
sleep efficiency
hypertensive patients treated with beta-blockers
+7.6%
significantly increased
#2
melatonin supplementation
decrease
sleep onset latency to Stage 2
hypertensive patients treated with beta-blockers
-14 min
significantly decreased
#3
melatonin supplementation
increase
Stage 2 sleep
hypertensive patients treated with beta-blockers
+41 min
significantly increased
#4
melatonin supplementation
no change
durations of other sleep stages
hypertensive patients treated with beta-blockers
no significant change
did not significantly change
#5
melatonin supplementation
decrease
sleep onset latency
hypertensive patients treated with beta-blockers
-25 min
significantly shortened
#6
Abstract

STUDY OBJECTIVES: In the United States alone, approximately 22 million people take beta-blockers chronically. These medications suppress endogenous nighttime melatonin secretion, which may explain a reported side effect of insomnia. Therefore, we tested whether nightly melatonin supplementation improves sleep in hypertensive patients treated with beta-blockers. DESIGN: Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group design. SETTING: Clinical and Translational Research Center at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston. PATIENTS: Sixteen hypertensive patients (age 45-64 yr; 9 women) treated with the beta-blockers atenolol or metoprolol. INTERVENTIONS: Two 4-day in-laboratory admissions including polysomnographically recorded sleep. After the baseline assessment during the first admission, patients were randomized to 2.5 mg melatonin or placebo (nightly for 3 weeks), after which sleep was assessed again during the second 4-day admission. Baseline-adjusted values are reported. One patient was removed from analysis because of an unstable dose of prescription medication. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS: In comparison with placebo, 3 weeks of melatonin supplementation significantly increased total sleep time (+36 min; P = 0.046), increased sleep efficiency (+7.6%; P = 0.046), and decreased sleep onset latency to Stage 2 (-14 min; P = 0.001) as assessed by polysomnography. Compared with placebo, melatonin significantly increased Stage 2 sleep (+41 min; P = 0.037) but did not significantly change the durations of other sleep stages. The sleep onset latency remained significantly shortened on the night after discontinuation of melatonin administration (-25 min; P = 0.001), suggesting a carryover effect. CONCLUSION: n hypertensive patients treated with beta-blockers, 3 weeks of nightly melatonin supplementation significantly improved sleep quality, without apparent tolerance and without rebound sleep disturbance during withdrawal of melatonin supplementation (in fact, a positive carryover effect was demonstrated). These findings may assist in developing countermeasures against sleep disturbances associated with beta-blocker therapy. CLINICAL TRIAL INFORMATION: his study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier: NCT00238108; trial name: Melatonin Supplements for Improving Sleep in Individuals with Hypertension; URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00238108.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
ActigraphyAdrenergic beta-AntagonistsDouble-Blind MethodFemaleHumansHypertensionMaleMelatoninMiddle AgedPolysomnographySleepSleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety85
Efficacy90/10
Quality88/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations68
Citations/Year5.2
Relative Citation Ratio2.44
NIH Percentile80.2%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score2.02
Normalized Score0.88
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