National Post (National Edition)

The magic of melatonin

YOUR BODY MAKES THE HORMONE AND IT CAN HELP YOU GET A BETTER SLEEP

- LISA STRAUSS MELATONIN AS A SUPPLEMENT

Many of us think of melatonin only as an over-the-counter sleep aid, given its widespread use. But melatonin is a hormone already circulatin­g through our bodies, like adrenalin or cortisol.

As a sleep psychologi­st, when I first mention melatonin to patients, they often interrupt to say, “I tried that. It didn't work.” They are confusing our bodies' naturally synthesize­d, “endogenous” melatonin with pill, gummy, liquid or other “exogenous” forms of melatonin.

Both endogenous and exogenous melatonin can help us sleep better if we understand how to sidestep pitfalls and make them work for us.

LIGHT AFFECTS MELATONIN OUTPUT AND RHYTHM

Melatonin, among other functions, tells our bodies when it is time to sleep. And this function is cued by the timing of light and darkness. Darkness promotes melatonin, and light suppresses it. The blue end of the spectrum (present even in white light) is melatonin's most potent — but not exclusive — suppressan­t.

But over the millennia, we have introduced inconsiste­ncy to the timing of light and darkness, and therefore to our melatonin and sleep rhythms.

Humans evolved near the equator. Day and night were of roughly equal length, and there was scant seasonal variation in patterns of light and dark. As we migrated to other latitudes, and as we modernized, we introduced seasonal variation, artificial light, cross-timezone travel, daylight time and close-range screens.

Luckily, our bodies evolved to adjust to new “time zones” — patterns of light and darkness. This adaptabili­ty is both our strength and our Achilles heel because we want to be able to adapt if we move from D.C. to California, but we don't want our biological rhythms upended by light needed to read a short story to get back to sleep in the middle of the night.

Melatonin plays an important part in this adaptabili­ty. And by regularizi­ng its activity, we encourage robust output and maintain our biological rhythms when we don't want them altered.

Under optimal conditions, we begin to ramp up melatonin production two to three hours before sleep (in primitive concert with sunset). Levels are high all night long until morning light quashes it and inclines our bodies to begin secreting it again in the evening.

When this ancestral cycle is disrupted by inconsiste­nt, melatonin-suppressin­g, artificial nighttime light and weak indoor morning light, our rhythms are forced to recalibrat­e to new time zones, often haphazardl­y.

Fortunatel­y, ample light in the morning, throughout the day and in the early evening mitigates the undesirabl­e melatonin-suppressin­g effects of late-evening light.

HOW TO STABILIZE

AND PROMOTE AMPLE MELATONIN

There are ways to use natural and artificial light to support our bodies' production of melatonin to help us sleep better.

Go outside (ideally) for daily light for 15 minutes (without looking at the sun) 16 hours before preferred sleep. For instance, begin at 7 a.m. if you desire regular 11 p.m. sleep. Some gentle indoor light for 30 or so minutes before that is fine, much as light gradually accretes with sunrise.

Work near a window, if possible, during the day. Mildly blue-enriched indoor light would be a second choice.

Spend some time outdoors in the early evening. In the winter, you can enhance indoor light then.

Dim all light and eliminate the blue end of the spectrum two hours before sleep (at 9 p.m. for an 11 p.m. sleep time) until lights out. Blue-blocking can best be achieved with special glasses, screen filters and red bulbs rather than apps. Limit close-range screens.

Blue-block and dim any middleof-the-night light. Light continues to exert an effect even after it is turned off and brief exposures can add up.

These steps are not a substitute for individual­ized health care; nor are they for those who want to significan­tly alter their sleep timing.

As a supplement, melatonin can serve as a sleep aid in older age, when we naturally produce less. It can assist in treatment of disorders of biological rhythms. It is sometimes recommende­d for migraines, irritable bowel syndrome and other conditions. It can also have positive effects on inflammati­on and immunity.

WHAT TO CONSIDER WHEN USING A MELATONIN SUPPLEMENT

Some people inadverten­tly misuse melatonin:

❚ As a hypnotic. While there are exceptions, melatonin is not that efficaciou­s for sleep onset and maintenanc­e. It works better as a “chronobiot­ic” to manipulate biological rhythm for conditions such as jet lag, delayed sleep phase (night-owlishness) and impaired sleep timing in people who are blind.

❚ At concerning­ly high doses. We produce melatonin in minute quantities in response to exquisitel­y orchestrat­ed instructio­ns from the hypothalam­us. Doctors often recommend between 0.3 and 5 mg. Doses greater than or equal to 10 mg are not often associated with serious adverse events, but may have unintended consequenc­es and exacerbate side-effects such as headaches, dizziness, daytime sleepiness and nightmares.

❚ At the wrong time. Phase response curves help guide what time to take melatonin to shift or maintain the timing of sleep. Two to three hours before sleep mimics sunset. Melatonin won't help sleep much when your natural levels are already high, but it might throw off your rhythm if it's (still) in your system at the wrong time (more likely at high doses).

❚ For too long. We don't know enough about long-term — greater than six months — safety.

❚ From the wrong source. Studies have exposed inconsiste­nt and sometimes vastly higher doses than labels indicate. Purity is another concern. Look for the USP or NSF mark for pharmaceut­ical-grade melatonin.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Melatonin tells our bodies when it is time to sleep. Darkness promotes melatonin, while light suppresses the hormone.
GETTY IMAGES Melatonin tells our bodies when it is time to sleep. Darkness promotes melatonin, while light suppresses the hormone.

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