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Sunday, September 11, 2016

Melatonin and Chronobiology

Melatonin, also known as the “mother hormone of chronobiology,” is a hormone made in the pineal gland. This process is due to cues from the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus, which regulates the circadian rhythm. When the retinas stop sensing as much blue wavelength light, the suprachiasmatic nucleus is informed and induces the pineal gland to begin making melatonin. When the retinas sense early morning, melatonin production is ceased and hormones associated with wakefulness are made instead. This cycle helps to create a circadian rhythm, or 24-hour sleep-wake cycle.
Melatonin has a very short half-life of about 30 minutes. Because it breaks down so quickly, it must be made continuously throughout the night in order to sustain restful sleep. In people with a healthy circadian rhythm, melatonin levels rise rapidly after dark and plateau throughout the night until early morning. These high levels are essential not just for falling asleep, but for sleeping deeply and restfully. Melatonin levels then drop sharply in the early morning to allow people to wake up in response to increasing light levels.
Chronic sleep disturbance in an average of three out of seven nights raises the likelihood of heart attack, stroke, diabetes, vascular disease and medically problematic obesity considerably.
For the older, pineal gland sufficient nighttime production of melatonin is no longer possible, even when the body is exposed to complete darkness. The pineal gland is heavily supplied with blood and like other areas with vessels, it is predestined to suffer from calcification. This leads to pronounced insomnia.
Research in chronobiology has shown that maintaining melatonin cycles is important not just to restful sleep but also to overall health.
Source: https://www.chronobiology.com/sleep-2/melatonin/