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Melatonin for Sleep Disorders in Patients with Neurodegenerative Diseases.

Current neurology and neuroscience reports
July 1, 2016
Lynn Marie Trotti et al. (2 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the effects of melatonin on sleep disorders and neurodegeneration in patients with neurodegenerative diseases.

Results Summary

Melatonin showed minimal to no benefit on sleep quantity in Alzheimer's patients and mixed results on subjective sleep quality. No cognitive benefits were observed, and in Parkinson's patients, there was only slight improvement in objective sleep measures and subjective benefit in small studies.

Population

Patients with neurodegenerative diseases (Alzheimer's and Parkinson's).

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (7)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
melatonin
no change
neurodegeneration
patients with neurodegenerative diseases
-
have not shown strong effects
#1
melatonin
no change
sleep quantity
Alzheimer's patients
-
demonstrate a lack of benefit
#2
melatonin
neutral
subjective measures of sleep quality
Alzheimer's patients
-
are mixed
#3
melatonin
increase
sleep quality
Alzheimer's patients
-
possible symptomatic improvements seen
#4
melatonin
no change
cognition
Alzheimer's patients
-
have not been observed
#5
melatonin
increase
objective sleep measures
Parkinson's patients
-
may be minimal benefit
#6
melatonin
increase
sleep
Parkinson's patients
-
a suggestion of subjective benefit
#7
Abstract

In patients with neurodegenerative diseases, sleep disorders are common; they impair the quality of life for patients and caregivers and are associated with poorer clinical outcomes. Melatonin has circadian, hypnotic, and free radical-scavenging effects, and preclinical data suggest benefits of melatonin on neurodegeneration. However, randomized, controlled trials of melatonin in patients with neurodegenerative diseases have not shown strong effects. Trials in Alzheimer's patients demonstrate a lack of benefit on sleep quantity. Subjective measures of sleep quality are mixed, with possible symptomatic improvements seen only on some measures or at some time points. Benefits on cognition have not been observed across several studies. In Parkinson's patients, there may be minimal benefit on objective sleep measures, but a suggestion of subjective benefit in few, small studies. Effective treatments for the sleep disorders associated with neurodegenerative diseases are urgently needed, but current data are insufficient to establish melatonin as such a treatment.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Central Nervous System DepressantsHumansMelatoninNeurodegenerative DiseasesSleep Wake Disorders
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy30/10
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations20
Citations/Year2.2
Relative Citation Ratio0.94
NIH Percentile47.8%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score1.79
Normalized Score0.47
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