It’s tempting to think that melatonin will help in bipolar disorder. As we covered last month, disrupted circadian rhythms are one of the leading causes of bipolar, and blue-light blocking glasses ─ which increase the brain’s own melatonin ─ are effective in mania, and melatonin works in circadian rhythm disorders like jet lag. But in its debut randomized controlled trial in bipolar disorder, oral melatonin falls flat. [Link]
Published On: 6/30/20
Duration: 1 minute, 52 seconds
Transcript:
It’s tempting to think that melatonin will help in bipolar disorder. As we covered last month, disrupted circadian rhythms are one of the leading causes of bipolar, and blue-light blocking glasses ─ which increase the brain’s own melatonin ─ are effective in mania, and melatonin works in circadian rhythm disorders like jet lag. But in its debut randomized controlled trial in bipolar disorder, oral melatonin falls flat.
The small 3-week study involved 41 patients with bipolar in a manic or hypomanic state. Compared to placebo, melatonin made no difference on the primary outcome measure of manic symptoms and did not even help sleep. On secondary outcomes ─ which were mainly different ways of data fishing among the bipolar rating scales ─ there was a suggestion of improvement in the melatonin group, but these would not be considered statistically significant since they were secondary measures.
The study used a quality extended-release version of melatonin ─ Circadin ─ which is approved as a prescription med for sleep in the UK.
Is there hope for melatonin? Maybe. The melatonin agonist ramelteon/rozerem has a small effect on bipolar depression, but behavioral strategies are currently the most effective way to realign the broken circadian system in bipolar disorder. We reviewed those in our June 1 podcast.
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