The putative role of oxidative stress and inflammation in the pathophysiology of sleep dysfunction across neuropsychiatric disorders: Focus on chronic fatigue syndrome, bipolar disorder and multiple sclerosis.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to explore the potential of melatonin as a therapeutic target for alleviating sleep and circadian dysfunction in neuro-immune disorders like chronic fatigue syndrome, bipolar disorder, and multiple sclerosis.
Results Summary
The study suggests that melatonin, along with other agents targeting immune and oxidative & nitrosative pathways, may help mitigate sleep and circadian abnormalities in neuro-immune disorders by addressing systemic inflammation and glial cell activation.
Population
Patients with neuro-immune disorders such as chronic fatigue syndrome, bipolar disorder, and multiple sclerosis.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
melatonin | decrease | sleep and circadian dysfunction | neuro-immune disorders | - | hold promise in alleviating | #1 |
molecular hydrogen | decrease | sleep and circadian dysfunction | neuro-immune disorders | - | hold promise in alleviating | #2 |
Sleep and circadian abnormalities are prevalent and burdensome manifestations of diverse neuro-immune diseases, and may aggravate the course of several neuropsychiatric disorders. The underlying pathophysiology of sleep abnormalities across neuropsychiatric disorders remains unclear, and may involve the inter-play of several clinical variables and mechanistic pathways. In this review, we propose a heuristic framework in which reciprocal interactions of immune, oxidative and nitrosative stress, and mitochondrial pathways may drive sleep abnormalities across potentially neuroprogressive disorders. Specifically, it is proposed that systemic inflammation may activate microglial cells and astrocytes in brain regions involved in sleep and circadian regulation. Activated glial cells may secrete pro-inflammatory cytokines (for example, interleukin-1 beta and tumour necrosis factor alpha), nitric oxide and gliotransmitters, which may influence the expression of key circadian regulators (e.g., the Circadian Locomotor Output Cycles Kaput (CLOCK) gene). Furthermore, sleep disruption may further aggravate oxidative and nitrosative, peripheral immune activation, and (neuro) inflammation across these disorders in a vicious pathophysiological loop. This review will focus on chronic fatigue syndrome, bipolar disorder, and multiple sclerosis as exemplars of neuro-immune disorders. We conclude that novel therapeutic targets exploring immune and oxidative & nitrosative pathways (p.e. melatonin and molecular hydrogen) hold promise in alleviating sleep and circadian dysfunction in these disorders.