| Literature DB >> 22629173 |
Abstract
Melatonin is a highly pleiotropic signaling molecule, which is released as a hormone of the pineal gland predominantly during night. Melatonin secretion decreases during aging. Reduced melatonin levels are also observed in various diseases, such as types of dementia, some mood disorders, severe pain, cancer, and diabetes type 2. Melatonin dysfunction is frequently related to deviations in amplitudes, phasing, and coupling of circadian rhythms. Gene polymorphisms of melatonin receptors and circadian oscillator proteins bear risks for several of the diseases mentioned. A common symptom of insufficient melatonin signaling is sleep disturbances. It is necessary to distinguish between symptoms that are curable by short melatonergic actions and others that require extended actions during night. Melatonin immediate release is already effective, at moderate doses, for reducing difficulties of falling asleep or improving symptoms associated with poorly coupled circadian rhythms, including seasonal affective and bipolar disorders. For purposes of a replacement therapy based on longer-lasting melatonergic actions, melatonin prolonged release and synthetic agonists have been developed. Therapies with melatonin or synthetic melatonergic drugs have to consider that these agents do not only act on the SCN, but also on numerous organs and cells in which melatonin receptors are also expressed.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22629173 PMCID: PMC3354573 DOI: 10.1100/2012/640389
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ScientificWorldJournal ISSN: 1537-744X
Diseases and disorders that cause decreases in human* melatonin secretion independently of apparent tissue destruction in SCN or pineal gland.
| Disease/disorder | Comments | References |
|---|---|---|
| Schizophrenia | Only in a subpopulation | [ |
| Multiple sclerosis with major depression | In major depression alone, mostly phase shifts instead of decreases | [ |
| Primary obsessive-compulsive disorder | [ | |
| Menière's disease | Relationship to stress by tinnitus and vertigo? | [ |
| Fibromyalgia | Studied in women | [ |
| Pain reduced by melatonin | [ | |
| Migraine | [ | |
| Critical illness | [ | |
| Endometrial cancer | [ | |
| Nonsmall cell lung cancer | In part caused by pain? | [ |
| Acute intermittent porphyria | Further decreased by seizures | [ |
| Diabetes type 2 | [ |
*For preclinical findings of these and other diseases or respective animal models see [3].