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Study shows melatonin helps alleviate violent sleep disorder symptoms
A Mayo Clinic study shows that melatonin successfully alleviates many patients'
symptoms of REM-sleep behavior disorder (RBD), a violent sleep condition that
manifests during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, a stage of deep sleep in which
most dreaming occurs.
"Melatonin can be considered as one possible option for RBD," says
Brad Boeve, M.D., Mayo Clinic neurologist and sleep specialist, and the study's
principal investigator.
People who experience RBD appear to act out their dreams, in which screaming,
yelling, hitting, kicking and jumping out of bed tend to occur. These behaviors
can cause injury to these people or their bed partners.
"Normally in REM sleep, almost every muscle in your body is paralyzed
and you don't move," explains Dr. Boeve. "Therefore, when you have a
dream, there's no excessive activity and no potential for injury. In this
disorder, for reasons we don't fully understand yet, that normal paralysis is
lost, and people will appear to act out their dreams. Sometimes, they're
pleasant dreams. Usually, they're nightmarish, violent dreams with the person
being chased or attacked by something or someone. So, they try to defend
themselves or fight against it, leading to punching and kicking. They can injure
themselves by jumping out of bed, striking the bedposts or diving out of bed. As
for their bed partners - they often get injured."
Dr. Boeve describes the potential injuries from RBD as "pretty
violent" and points out the issues faced by bed partners of RBD patients.
"Many of them - if they've been hit enough times or have been bruised or
injured - do move out of the bed," says Dr. Boeve. "But, like most
couples, they want to sleep together."
Due to undesirable side effects of the current standard treatment for RBD,
clonazepam, Dr. Boeve and colleagues sought to test other drugs to treat this
condition. A small European study showing some success in treating RBD patients
with melatonin and the personal story of a Mayo Clinic patient who tried
melatonin on his own for RBD and experienced success, convinced the Mayo Clinic
researchers that supplementing was worth studying.
The Mayo Clinic study was conducted retrospectively with 15 consecutive
patients treated with melatonin at Mayo Clinic; findings about the treatment of
14 of them were analyzed. All but one of the patients were male. All of these
patients had another neurologic disorder such as Lewy body dementia, Parkinson's
disease or narcolepsy. Of these patients, eight, or 57 percent, found melatonin
treatment successful for a year or more. For two patients, melatonin was
ineffective, including one patient for whom melatonin increased both the
frequency and severity of RBD episodes.
"There are gradations in frequency and severity of RBD episodes, and how
effective melatonin is for RBD," says Dr. Boeve. "For some people, RBD
happens every night. For others, it happens at least two or three nights per
week. So, on the nights that would be bad, these patients have much better
sleep, and therefore their dreams aren't as active or as violent. They find the
nightmare quality of their dreams decreases, and they have far less tendency to
punch and kick. Therefore, the potential for injury to themselves and their bed
partners is reduced."
Only five, or 36 percent, of the patients who took melatonin for RBD
experienced infrequent, minor side effects such as headaches or sleepiness in
the morning, all of which stopped when the amount of medication prescribed was
reduced.
The reason melatonin is effective for some RBD patients remains a mystery to
the researchers.
"Melatonin is a naturally-occurring hormone that all of us has - it
rises at night and has sleep-promoting effects," says Dr. Boeve. "It
has been shown to be helpful in jet lag. Although we were hopeful that melatonin
would be helpful in treating insomnia, most people do not find that it helps
much. Why this would decrease RBD - we don't know. There isn't a sound
theoretical reason why it works."
Even though melatonin is available at drugstores over-the-counter, Dr. Boeve
and colleagues would not advocate self-medicating for RBD. He suggests that
patients confer with a sleep specialist and get a proper diagnosis first,
especially because the symptoms of RBD can be mistaken for sleep apnea, which is
treated differently than RBD. Patients also may have other sleep disorders that
can be diagnosed and treated. Furthermore, Dr. Boeve points out that it is
critical for patients to be evaluated and treated appropriately, because RBD is
associated with certain neurologic disorders and the diagnosis may have
implications for one's future health care.
"First, it's important to recognize RBD is a diagnosable and treatable
disorder," says Dr. Boeve. "Therefore, if a person has violent dreams
or acts out the dreams, it is worthwhile to see a clinician for this. If there
is potential for injury, then a patient should be evaluated - see a sleep
clinician and undergo a sleep study for diagnosis and treatment. You want to
make sure you know what you are treating, and then you can decide how to manage
it. Importantly, since some patients with RBD develop dementia or Parkinsonism
years later, a neurologist should follow them so that treatment can be started
early if cognitive or motor symptoms develop. This will become increasingly
important as better treatments are developed for dementia and Parkinsonism."
Before advocating widespread usage of melatonin for RBD, Dr. Boeve and
colleagues would like to see a prospective, double-blind, placebo-controlled
study conducted with RBD patients.
There is no established incidence or prevalence of RBD at present. According
to Dr. Boeve, it is primarily a male disorder; 80 to 90 percent of RBD patients
are male. Although some patients develop the disorder in their 20s or 30s, Dr.
Boeve indicates it usually manifests in males in their 40s, 50s, 60s and 70s.
There is no known association between smoking or obesity and RBD.
"People think RBD is rare, but those of us who see many RBD patients
even within our local community, believe it is quite likely that this disorder
is far more common that we have appreciated up to this point," says Dr.
Boeve.
More information:
Source: Mayo Clinic
The findings of this study were published in the July 2003 issue of Sleep
Medicine, http://www.elsevier.com/locate/sleep
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