Literature DB >> 34644731

Melatonin and the cardiovascular system in animals: systematic review and meta-analysis.

Eduardo Carvalho de Arruda Veiga1, Ricardo Dos Santos Simões2, Leonardo L Caviola2, Luiz Carlos Abreu3, Ricardo Carvalho Cavalli1, José Cipolla-Neto4, Edmund Chada Baracat2, José Maria Soares Júnior2.   

Abstract

Melatonin, a hormone released by the pineal gland, demonstrates several effects on the cardiovascular system. Herein, we performed a systematic review and meta-analysis to verify the effects of melatonin in an experimental model of myocardial infarction. We performed a systematic review according to PRISMA recommendations and reviewed MEDLINE, Embase, and Cochrane databases. Only articles in English were considered. A systematic review of the literature published between November 2008 and June 2019 was performed. The meta-analysis was conducted using the RevMan 5.3 program provided by the Cochrane Collaboration. In total, 858 articles were identified, of which 13 were included in this review. The main results of this study revealed that melatonin benefits the cardiovascular system by reducing infarct size, improving cardiac function according to echocardiographic and hemodynamic analyses, affords antioxidant effects, improves the rate of apoptosis, decreases lactate dehydrogenase activity, enhances biometric analyses, and improves protein levels, as analyzed by western blotting and quantitative PCR. In the meta-analysis, we observed a statistically significant decrease in infarct size (mean difference [MD], -20.37 [-23.56, -17.18]), no statistical difference in systolic pressure (MD, -1.75 [-5.47, 1.97]), a statistically significant decrease in lactate dehydrogenase in animals in the melatonin group (MD, -4.61 [-6.83, -2.40]), and a statistically significant improvement in the cardiac ejection fraction (MD, -8.12 [-9.56, -6.69]). On analyzing potential bias, we observed that most studies presented a low risk of bias; two parameters were not included in the analysis, and one parameter had a high risk of bias. Melatonin exerts several effects on the cardiovascular system and could be a useful therapeutic target to combat various cardiovascular diseases.

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Year:  2021        PMID: 34644731      PMCID: PMC8478132          DOI: 10.6061/clinics/2021/e2863

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clinics (Sao Paulo)        ISSN: 1807-5932            Impact factor:   2.365


BACKGROUND

Melatonin (N-acetyl-5-methoxytryptamine) is a hormone produced by the pineal gland exclusively at night and is released into the bloodstream and cerebrospinal fluid in a circadian manner to regulate several physiological and neuroendocrine functions (1-3). The effects of melatonin are dependent on non-receptor- and receptor-mediated mechanisms of action. Membrane melatonin receptors (MT1, MTNR1A, MT1, and MTRN1B) are G-protein-coupled receptors, signaling through Gi-G0 or Gq-G11 transduction pathways, depending on the target organ. Melatonin secreted at night might interact with its effector and produce immediate effects when melatonin is present in the circulation (e.g., nighttime blood pressure dipping). Moreover, during the night and through several mechanisms of action, melatonin primes prospective effects (such as controlling autonomic nervous system activity) that can be observed only during the day when no pineal melatonin production occurs (3-6). Over the last 20 years, several studies have suggested that melatonin influences the cardiovascular system (7,8). Melatonin may have significant anti-inflammatory and cardioprotective properties by directly eliminating free radicals, as well as indirectly via antioxidant activity. In addition, melatonin may be involved in blood pressure regulation and have significant anti-atherogenic effects (8-13). In this systematic review, cardiovascular diseases such as hypertension, myocardial infarction, ischemia, and reperfusion were selected to verify the action of melatonin, as we believe that these cardiopathies currently represent a large number of cardiovascular diseases (13,14). Our study aimed to verify the effects of melatonin in an experimental model of myocardial infarction.

SEARCH STRATEGIES

In the present study, the search strategy was performed as described by Tawfik et al. (15). We used MEDLINE, Google Scholar, and Cochrane databases and reviewed literature published from November 2008 to June 2019; we restricted this systematic review to the last ten years, covering the latest and most relevant articles worldwide. First, we selected keywords from related articles, using Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) to identify more related keywords with similar meanings as follows: (“melatonin”) [MeSH Terms] AND (“cardiovascular system”) [MeSH Terms] [All Fields]. We then searched the three databases. Accordingly, we identified 2096 articles in PubMed using the “other animals” filter, 602 articles using Google Scholar filtering for keywords only in the title, and three articles using a Cochrane Library advanced search; the terms used were “melatonin and cardiovascular system” In addition, we reviewed retrieved articles to identify additional studies (Figure 1). This review was conducted according to the recommendations of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) (16,17).
Figure 1

Flow chart of experimental design.

We excluded studies with cell culture experiments, as well as pre- and post-conditioning studies. The inclusion criteria were animal studies, cell culture studies, and in vivo experiments. The control group was the melatonin group in this study. The melatonin group varied in each article, as studies persistently experimented with a melatonin group related to a drug or an event. The process of paper retrieval and titles and abstract evaluation was conducted by two independent blinded researchers capable of compiling systematic reviews (ECV and RS), following the inclusion and exclusion criteria according to the tenets of PICO (16-19). The PICO was defined as patients in case the systematic review was performed in animals, interventions considering the administration of melatonin in animals using an experimental model of myocardial infarction, comparison, to compare the melatonin group with the control group receiving no melatonin, and outcome, which were results of administering melatonin. The selected articles were critically evaluated to determine their potential inclusion in the review. In the event of a disagreement between investigators regarding studies selected, a third reviewer was consulted (LCA). In the present systematic review, data obtained from selected studies were tabulated, and the following characteristics were listed when present in the articles: authors’ names, year of publication, animal type, sex (M/F), animal species, age (months), weight, induction model, and site injury (Table 1). Table 2 presents the following information: authors, sample size, number of groups, number of animals per group, melatonin administration, melatonin doses, and dependent variables. Table 3 lists the most frequent recommendations in preclinical research guidelines for in vivo animal experiments (18). Table 4 evaluates the study characteristics of selected controlled animal studies, with prior exercise and myocardial infarction as variables that showed a significant difference between the melatonin control group and the study group. These were classified as S for “significant difference,” and variables that did not present a significant difference were classified as NS (not significant).
Table 1

Study characteristics of selected control experimental studies assessing melatonin and the cardiovascular system.

AuthorsAnimal typeAnimal raceAge (months)WeightInduction modelSite injury
Zhang et al. (21)MiceC57/B6--Sepsis-induced cardiac dysfunctionalCardiovascular system
Benova et al. (22)RatWistar9 months-ObesityCardiovascular system
Chen et al. (23)RatSprague-Dawley-200-250 gMyocardial ischemia reperfusionMyocardial tissue
Liu et al. (24)MiceC57/B66 months-Myocardial infarctionHeart
Simko et al. (25)RatWistar3 months-hypertensionCardiovascular system
Simko et al. (26)RatWistar3 monthshypertensionCardiovascular system
Stacchiotti et al. (27)MiceB6.VLEAN/OlaHsd and B6.V-Lepob/OlaHsd4 weeks-ObesityMitochondria of cardiomyocyte
Chaudagar et al. (28)RatWistar8 months-hypertensionCardiovascular system
Salmanoglu et al. (29)RatWistar-250-350 gDiabeticLiver tissue
Cheng et al. (30)RabbitsNew Zealand4 weeks2.0-2.5 kgAtherosclerosisAorta
Liu et al. (31)RatSprague-Dawley3 months280-360 gMyocardial ischemia reperfusionMyocardial tissue
Zhu et al. (32)RatSprague-Dawley10 weeks250 gMyocardial infarctionHeart
Liu et al. (33)Rat--350-400 gMyocardial ischemia reperfusionHeart
Drobnik et al. (34)RatWistar4 weeks290-320 gMyocardial infarctionHeart
Repova et al. (35)RatWistar3 monthshypertensionCardiovascular system
Drobnik et al. (36)RatWistar-300-330 gMyocardial infarctionHeart
Chen et al. (37)MiceMice Gpx-/- C57BL/6--Myocardial ischemia reperfusion in vitro Heart
Petrosillo et al. (38)RatWistar-250-330 gMyocardial ischemia reperfusionHeart
Table 2

Characteristics (samples size, number of groups, number of animals/groups, dependent variables) of selected experimental studies assessing the effects of melatonin and the cardiovascular system.

AuthorsSample sizeNumber of groupsNumber of animals/groupsMelatonin administrationMelatonin dosesDependent variables
Zhang et al. (21)2446Intraperitoneal injection30 mg/kgEcho, histological analysis, creatinine kinase measurement, TUNEL analysis, western blotting.
Benova et al. (22)48412Drinking water10 mg of melatonin was dissolved in 100 mL of water for 8 weeksHeart function in Langendorff perfusion, western blot, real-time PCR,
Chen et al. (23)305Intraperitoneal at the reperfusion20 mg/kgEcho, IS2, lactate dehydrogenase release, CMEC measurement in vitro IRI assay, western blotting, qRT-PCR, and detection of autophagosomes.
Liu et al. (24)1836Gavage50 mg/kgEcho, histological analysis, PCR, western blot, CTRP3 detection.
Simko et al. (25)40410Water consumption was 12-13 mL/100 g of body weight10 mg of melatonin was dissolved in 100 mL of water for 4 weeksHemodynamics measures, biometric analysis, determination of hydroxyproline, angiotensin, and aldosterone analysis.
Simko et al. (26)66611Drinking water adjustment to daily water consumption to ensure the correct dosage10 mg/kg/ day for 6 weeksHemodynamics measures, determination of hydroxyproline, NO synthase activity, oxidative load measurement, and western blotting of NF-ΚB.
Stacchiotti et al. (27)404105th to 13th weeks of life/drinking water100 mg/kg/day for 8 weeksHistomorphometric evaluations, nuclear cardiomyocyte morphometry, mitochondrial and immunohistochemical analysis.
Chaudagar et al. (28)2446Drinking water10 mg/kg/day for 67 daysHemodynamics measures, biometric analysis, and NO assays.
Salmanoglu et al. (29)356-Oral gavage10 mg/kg/day for 2 weeksVasocontractile response, measurement of total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, glucose, NO, and insulin, MDA assay, and tissue antioxidant levels.
Cheng et al. (30)60320-20 mg/kg for 4 weeksImmunohistochemical analysis, HE staining, western blot analysis, and qRT-PCR.
Liu et al. (31)60512Intravenous injection immediately after reperfusion10 mg/kgIF2, myocardial ultrastructure, western blotting and determination of the opening degree of MPTPs.
Zhu et al. (32)---Melatonin stem cells were treated for 24 hours5 µMMeasurements of cell culture antioxidant properties, apoptosis, analysis of paracrine factors, LV functions, histology.
Liu et al. (33)60612Intraperitoneal injectionGroup I: 2.5 mg/kg, Group II: 5 mg/kg, Group III: 10 mg/kgHemodynamics measures, apoptosis, electron microscope examination, analysis on mitochondria.
Drobnik et al. (34)2137Drinking water for 6 weeks10 mg/kgCollagen determination, estimation of glycosaminoglycans, electron microscope examination.
Repova et al. (35)40410Drinking water for 6 weeks10 mg/kgCollagen determination, hemodynamics measures.
Drobnik et al. (36)60512Intraperitoneal injection for 4 weeksGroup 1: 300 µg/100 g b.w. Group 4: 3 mg/100 g.b.w. Group 5: 1.5 mg/100 g.b.w.Estimation of lipid peroxidation, collagen determination, estimation of glycosaminoglycans.
Chen et al. (37)---Intraperitoneal injection 30 min before harvesting the hear for in vitro preparation150 µg/kgCardiac function, hemodynamics measures, lactate dehydrogenase released, apoptosis, immunohistochemistry.
Petrosillo et al. (38)4267Krebs-Henseleit solution for isolated heart50 µMInfarct size, lactate dehydrogenase released, hemodynamics measures, analysis on mitochondria.

IS1, measurement of infarct size by echocardiography; IS2, measurement of infarct size by Evans Blue or tetrazolium; echo, echocardiography measurements; CMEC, cardiac microvascular endothelial cells; IRI, ice recrystallization inhibition; CTRP3, C1q TNF Related Protein 3; NO, nitric oxide; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; HDL, high-density lipoprotein; MDA, malondialdehyde; qRT-PCR, quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction; LV, left ventricular; MPTP, mitochondrial permeability transition pore; NF-ΚB, Nuclear factor-kappa B; g.b.w., gross body weight; HE, hematoxylin-eosin.

Table 3

Most frequent recommendations appearing in preclinical research guidelines for in vivo animal experiments [Hendersen et al. (18)].

Validity typeRecommendation CategoryExamples
InternalChoice of sample sizePower calculation, larger samples sizes
Randomized allocation of animals to treatmentVarious methods of randomization
Blinding of outcome assessmentBlinded measurement or analysis
Flow of animals through an experimentRecording animals excluded from treatment through to analysis
Selection of appropriate control groupsUsing negative, positive, concurrent, or vehicle control groups
Study of dose-response relationshipsTesting above and below optimal therapeutic dose
ConstructCharacterization of animal properties at baselineCharacterizing inclusion/exclusion criteria, disease severity, age or sex
Matching model to the human manifestation of the diseaseMatching mechanism, chronicity or symptoms
Treatment response along a mechanistic pathwayCharacterizing pathway in terms of molecular biology, histology, physiology or behavior
Matching outcome measures to clinical settingsUsing functional or non-surrogate outcome measures
Matching model to the age of patients in clinical settingsUsing aged or juvenile animals
ExternalReplication in different models of the same diseaseDifferent transgenic strains or lesion techniques
Independent replicationDifferent investigators or research groups
Replication in different speciesRodents and nonhuman primates
Research programInter-study standardization of experimental designCoordination between independent research groups
Table 4

Most frequent recommendations in preclinical research guidelines for in vivo animal experiments [Henderson et al. (18)].

Validity typeRecommendation CategoryStudiesn (Percent of guidelines Citing)
InternalChoice of sample sizeZhang et al. (21); Benova et al. (22); Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al. (31); Liu et al. (33); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Petrosillo et al. (38).61.11%
Randomized allocation of animals to treatmentZhang et al. (21); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al. (31); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36).61.11%
Blinding of outcome assessmentZhang et al. (21); Benova et al. (22); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Liu et al. (24); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Salmanoglu et al (29); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al. (31); Zhu et al. (32); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Chen et al. (37); Petrosillo et al. (38).100%
Flow of animals through an experiment--
Selection of appropriate control groupsZhang et al. (21); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al. (31); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Petrosillo et al. (38).77.77%
Study of dose-response relationshipsChen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Chaudagar et al. (28); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al. (31); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Petrosillo et al. (38).61.11%
ConstructCharacterization of animal properties at baselineZhang et al (21); Benova et al. (22); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Liu et al (24); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al. (31); Zhu et al. (32); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Chen et al. (37); Petrosillo et al. (38).100%
Matching model to the human manifestation of the diseaseZhang et al. (21); Benova et al. (22); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al. (31); Zhu et al. (32); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Chen et al. (37); Petrosillo et al. (38).88.88%
Treatment response along a mechanistic pathwayZhang et al. (21); Benova et al. (22); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Liu et al. (24); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al (31); Zhu et al. (32); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Chen et al. (37); Petrosillo et al. (38).100%
Matching outcome measures to clinical settingsChen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al. (31); Liu et al. (33); Repova et al. (35); Chen et al. (37); Petrosillo et al. (38).66.66%
Matching model to the age of patients in clinical settingsZhang et al. (21); Benova et al. (22); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Liu et al. (24); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Liu et al. (31); Zhu et al. (32); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Chen et al. (37); Petrosillo et al. (38).100%
ExternalReplication in different models of the same disease--
Independent replicationZhang et al. (21); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Cheng et al. (30); Zhu et al. (32); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Chen et al. (37); Petrosillo et al. (38).77.77%
Replication in different speciesZhang et al. (21); Benova et al. (22); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Liu et al. (31); Zhu et al. (32); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Chen et al. (37); Petrosillo et al. (38).88.88%
Research programInter-study standardization of experimental designSimko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Zhu et al. (32); Repova et al. (35); Chen et al. (37).38.88%
RevMan (version 5.3; Cochrane Collaboration, Oxford, UK) was used to perform the meta-analysis. The random-effects model was used to account for the heterogeneity.

Statistical analysis

Mean values and standard deviation between studies, presented as the mean difference (MD) of post-intervention values after calculating the inverse variance, were employed to verify the magnitude of the protection afforded by melatonin (19). In addition, heterogeneity was assessed using Cochran’s Q and I2 tests, followed by visual inspection of the graph. The analyses were performed using the RevMan software (version 3.3.1) (20).

RESULTS

Figure 1 presents the search process, identification, and selection of articles. Based on our search strategies, 73 articles were retrieved from 2099 identified articles in PubMed using the “other animals” filter; among these, 18 were selected after reading the title and abstract. In addition, we selected three articles from BIREME and 0 articles from the Cochrane database. The inclusion and exclusion criteria are described in Figure 1 (21- 38). Articles were primarily excluded when assessments were performed in human subjects, apart from being unrelated to components of PICO; we mainly focused on experimental animal studies. In Table 4, we employed the criteria of Henderson et al. (18). We found that 61.11% (21,22,25-27,30,31,33,35,36,38) of selected studies had an appropriate sample size and 61.11% (21,23,25,26,27,30,31,33-36) had randomized animals, according to their materials and methods. All articles were blinded to the outcome assessment (21-38). We could not determine the criterion underlying the flow of animals through experiments, as no explicit statement regarding the same was available in the materials and methods. We observed that 77.77% of articles selected appropriate control groups (21,23,25-31,34,36) and 61.11% (23,25,26,28,30-32,34,36,38) had well-defined dose-response relationships. Moreover, all studies analyzed (21-38) had standard characterizations of animal properties at baseline. Overall, 89% of studies had employed an appropriate animal model that simulated the human manifestation of the disease (21-23,25-27,29-38). All studies that examined treatment responses according to a known mechanism (21-38) had characteristics within the requested standards. Only 67% (23-25,31,33,35,37,38) of selected manuscripts were within the range of the standard model of patient age in clinical settings. All studies did not follow other standard application models. In replicating different models of the same disease, 78% of studies (21- 23,25-2930,32,34-38) were independently replicated, whereas 88.88% (21-23,25- 29,31-38) were replicated in different species. For studies where the objective was inter-study standardization of an experimental design, 39% (25-28,32,35,37) reached this standard (Table 4). In Table 5, we analyzed the study characteristics of selected controlled animal studies. Accordingly, we obtained the following results according to each experiment performed in articles examined in this systematic review. Table 5 presents experiments in which melatonin significantly improved the investigated variable (marked as S), as well as those where melatonin showed no significant improvements (NS). Chen et al. (23), Liu et al. (31), and Petrosillo et al. (38) reported that melatonin significantly decreased infarct size. Zhang et al. (21) and Liu et al. (24) reported that melatonin improved echocardiographic measurements. Furthermore, studies by Benova et al. (22), Liu et al. (24), Simko et al. (25), Simko et al. (26), Liu et al. (33), Repova et al. (35), and Chen et al. (37) showed that melatonin had a positive effect on hemodynamic variables. In addition, we observed that the effects of melatonin were not significantly different from those reported in the study by Chaudagar et al. (28). These findings indicated the substantial benefit of using melatonin to stabilize hemodynamic parameters. Moreover, Zhu et al. (32) and Chen et al. (37) revealed that melatonin improved left ventricular cardiac function (Figure 2, Table 5).
Table 5

Study characteristics of selected controlled animal studies assessing melatonin and the cardiovascular system.

AuthorsAssessments
Zhang et al. (21)SSSSSS
Echocardiography measurementsApoptosis analysisWestern blottingCreatinine kinase measurementImmunohistochemical analysisDetection of autophagosomes
Benova et al. (22)SSSSNS
Biometric analysisWestern blottingqRT-PCRHemodynamics measures
Chen et al. (23)SSSSSS
Measurements of the infarct sizeMeasurement of lactate dehydrogenaseMeasures of CMEC in vitro IRI assayWestern blottingqRT-PCRDetection of autophagosomes
Liu et al. (24)SSSSS
Echocardiography measurementsHemodynamics measurementsApoptosis analysisWestern blottingqRT-PCR
Simko et al. (25)SSNSSNS
Biometric analysisHemodynamics measuresDetermination of hydroxyprolineAngiotensin analysisAldosterone analysis
Simko et al. (26)NSSSSS
Hemodynamics measuresDetermination of hydroxyprolineNO synthase activityOxidative loadMeasurement and western blotting of NF-ΚB
Stacchiotti et al. (27)SSSS
Histomorphometrically evaluationsNuclear cardiomyocyte morphometricMitochondrial analysisImmunohistochemical analysis
Chaudagar et al. (28)NSSS
Hemodynamics measuresBiometric analysisNO assays
Salmanoglu et al. (29)NSNSSSNS
Vasocontractile responseMeasures of total cholesterol, LDL, HDLNO assaysMDA assayMeasurements of tissue antioxidant levels
Cheng et al. (30)SSS
Immunohistochemical analysisWestern blottingqRT-PCR
Liu et al. (31)SSS
Measurements of the infarcted sizeWestern blottingDetermination of the opening degree of MPTPs
Zhu et al. (32)SSS
Measurements of cell cultures antioxidant propertiesApoptosis analysisLV functions
Liu et al. (33)SSSS
Hemodynamics measuresApoptosis analysisElectron microscope examinationAnalysis on mitochondria
Drobnik et al. (34)SSS
Determination of collagensDetermination of glycosaminoglycansElectron microscope examination
Repova et al. (35)SS
Hemodynamics measuresDetermination of collagen
Drobnik et al. (36)SNSS
Estimation of lipid peroxidationDetermination of collagenDetermination of glycosaminoglycans
Chen et al. (37)SSSSS
Cardiac functionHemodynamics measuresLactate dehydrogenaseApoptosis analysisImmunohistochemistry
Petrosillo et al. (38)SSSS
Measurements of the infarct sizeLactate dehydrogenaseHemodynamics measuresAnalysis on mitochondria

S, statistically significant; NS, not significant; CMEC, cardiac microvascular endothelial cells; IRI, ice recrystallization inhibition; qRT-PCR, quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction; NO, nitric oxide; NF-ΚB, Nuclear factor-kappa B; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; HDL, high-density lipoprotein; MDA, malondialdehyde; LV, left ventricular.

Figure 2

Representation of the SYRCLE’s risk of bias tool for animal studies. Hooijmans et al. (43).

Zhang et al. (21), Liu et al. (24), Simko et al. (26), Salmanoglu et al. (29), Zhu et al. (32), and Chen et al. (37) revealed that melatonin had positive effects on the rate of apoptosis (Table 5). Melatonin showed positive effects in studies examining western blotting of various proteins and quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR), including those by Zhang et al. (21), Benova et al. (22), Chen et al. (37), Liu et al. (31), and Liu et al. (24) (Table 5). Drobnik et al. (34) and Repova et al. reported that melatonin reportedly reduced collagen deposition (35) (Table 5). Immunohistochemical analyses were performed by Zhang et al. (21), Stacchiiotti et al. (27), Cheng et al. (30), Liu et al. (33), Drobnik et al. (34), and Cheng et al. (37), revealing that melatonin consistently yielded a positive result (Table 5). Melatonin showed benefits in biometric analyses, as determined by Benova et al. (22), Simko et al. (25), and Chaudagar et al. (28) (Table 5). Furthermore, melatonin showed beneficial effects on autophagosome evaluation, lactose dehydrogenase measurements, angiotensin, and aldosterone, nitric oxide levels, and mitochondrial analysis, as determined by Zhang et al. (21), Chen et al. (23), Simko et al. (25), Liu et al. (31), Liu et al. (33), Chen et al. (37), and Petrosillo et al. (38) (Table 5). The meta-analysis revealed a statistically significant decrease in infarct size (MD -20.37 [-23.56, -17.18]). However, there was no statistical difference in systolic pressure between articles analyzed (MD -1.75 [-5.47, 1.97]). In articles analyzing lactate dehydrogenase, a statistically significant decrease in the levels of this enzyme was noted in animals in melatonin groups (MD -4.61 [-6.83, -2.40]). With regard to the ejection fraction, two articles showed improvement in melatonin-treated groups. Another study analyzed the influence of melatonin in infarcted animals with the same ejection fraction; however, this parameter was not statistically significant in the meta-analysis (MD -8.12 [-9.56, -6.69]) (Figure 3).
Figure 3a

Metanalysis of infarct size measurement by echocardiography (% left ventricular).

Figure 3b

Metanalysis of systolic blood pressure (mmHg).

Figure 3c

Metanalysis of lactate dehydrogenase (U/L).

Figure 3d

Metanalysis of ejection fraction measured by echocardiography (% left ventricular).

In terms of selection bias, the results were well-balanced between low risk, no clear risk, and high risk of bias. All studies presented a low risk of bias in the baseline variable characteristics. On analyzing allocation concealment, most selected articles had a high risk, and a little less than half presented a low risk of bias. The randomization parameter was also fairly balanced between low risk, no clear risk, and high risk of bias. On analyzing random outcome assessment, most studies (more than 50%) had a low risk of bias, and some presented an unclear risk of bias. On analyzing blinding bias, most articles were unclear as to whether investigators were blinded. The articles presented a low risk of bias in the results of incomplete outcome data (Figure 4 and 5).
Figure 4

Risk of bias graph: review of authors’ judgment regarding each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included studies.

Figure 5

Risk of bias summary: review of authors’ judgment regarding each risk of bias item for each included study.

DISCUSSION

This systematic review revealed that melatonin has various beneficial effects on the cardiovascular system; these effects include decreased infarct size, improved cardiac function and cellular oxidation functions, reduced apoptosis, and healthier cellular histomorphology. In the present review, studies that analyzed echocardiographic measures exhibited melatonin benefits such as decreased infarct size, improved ejection fractions, improved systolic and diastolic diameters, and ameliorated recovery rates of cardiac function (24), while also favoring the treatment of cardiac hypertrophy and hearts that experienced myocardial infarction, ischemia, or reperfusion (21-38). On analyzing hemodynamic and biometric variables, melatonin appeared to confer significant benefits, such as improvements in systolic pressure, positive pressure derivative, lower left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, reduced left ventricular weight in relation to the total heart weight, and improved lung water content (22-25,28,35,38). Experimental models of obesity, hypertension, and other cardiovascular diseases reinforce the scientific practice of adopting animal models and assessing results prior to human application. These preclinical results indicate the effect of melatonin on the examined cardiovascular diseases. Reportedly, melatonin is an important anti-apoptotic agent in various tissues, reducing calcium uptake, mitigating reactive oxygen species generation, and decreasing the levels of pro-apoptotic proteins, such as Bax (39). In addition, melatonin destabilizes hypoxia-induced hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1α protein expression. Moreover, melatonin suppresses HIF-1α transcriptional activity under hypoxic conditions, resulting in vascular endothelial growth factor expression (40). Melatonin also confers anti-inflammatory effects on the cardiovascular system (41). Furthermore, a systematic review and recent meta-analysis have identified that melatonin supplementation facilitates blood pressure regulation (42). Melatonin has substantial benefits in the heart, involving various proteins (including superoxide dismutase [SOD], catalase [CAT], and glutathione peroxidase [Gpx]), while also improving the apoptosis rate. These findings were determined using several techniques, including western blotting analysis of BCL and Bx expression and the TUNEL assay, which measured the decrease in the level of apoptosis in myocardial cells when melatonin was added (23- 25,29,32). Other important variables analyzed following melatonin administration in the cardiovascular system were lactate dehydrogenase levels, mitochondrial analysis, lipid peroxidation, glycosaminoglycan, collagen level reduction, culture measurements, the antioxidant action of cells, opening gradient of mitochondrial channels, improvement in vasoconstriction, low-density lipoprotein (LDL), high-density lipoprotein (HDL), and cholesterol level measurements, nitric oxide synthase level measurements, histomorphometric evaluations, determination of hydroxyproline levels, and assessment of autophagosomes (21-38). The main novelty of this study is that it highlights the benefits assimilated by melatonin in experimental models of myocardial infarction, such as improved ejection fraction. Apart from limitations such as differences between animal organisms and humans, experimental research in Brazil is often restricted due to limited funding for animal studies when compared with human trials. In addition, results from animal studies fail to precisely correlate with the experience of testing melatonin or other substances in an environment that differs from the human body. Another limitation that must be considered is the nature of systematic reviews, which examine non-published data and data previously published by other authors, thus hindering novel scientific findings.

CONCLUSION

Notably, this systematic review is based on animal experiments. Melatonin may impact the cardiovascular system, including experimental myocardial infarction, and further studies are necessary to determine its use in clinical settings for treating cardiovascular diseases.

AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS

Veiga ECA contributed substantially to the study conception and design, definition of intellectual content, was involved in literature search, data analysis, statistical analysis, and manuscript preparation, drafting and critical review for important intellectual content, and approved the final manuscript version to be published. Simões RS, Caviola LL, Abreu LC and Cavalli RC were involved in data analysis and statistical analysis, manuscript drafting and critical review for important intellectual content, and approved the final manuscript version to be published. Cipolla-Neto J, Baracat EC and Soares Junior JM substantially contributed to the study conception and design, definition of intellectual content, were involved in manuscript preparation, drafting and critical review for important intellectual content, and approved the final manuscript version to be published.
  41 in total

1.  Melatonin protects against sepsis-induced cardiac dysfunction by regulating apoptosis and autophagy via activation of SIRT1 in mice.

Authors:  Wen-Xuan Zhang; Bai-Mei He; Ying Wu; Jian-Feng Qiao; Zhen-Yu Peng
Journal:  Life Sci       Date:  2018-11-27       Impact factor: 5.037

2.  Aging and vascular dysfunction: beneficial melatonin effects.

Authors:  Luigi Fabrizio Rodella; Gaia Favero; Claudia Rossini; Eleonora Foglio; Francesca Bonomini; Russel J Reiter; Rita Rezzani
Journal:  Age (Dordr)       Date:  2011-11-23

3.  Modulation of systemic and aortic nitric oxide by melatonin and n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids in isoproterenol affected spontaneously hypertensive and normotensive Wistar rats.

Authors:  K K Chaudagar; C Viczenczova; B Szeiffova Bacova; T Egan Benova; M Barancik; N Tribulova
Journal:  Physiol Res       Date:  2016-09-19       Impact factor: 1.881

4.  Protective effects of melatonin on ischemia-reperfusion induced myocardial damage and hemodynamic recovery in rats.

Authors:  L-F Liu; Q Qin; Z-H Qian; M Shi; Q-C Deng; W-P Zhu; H Zhang; X-M Tao; Y Liu
Journal:  Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci       Date:  2014       Impact factor: 3.507

Review 5.  Melatonin, mitochondria and hypertension.

Authors:  Ovidiu C Baltatu; Fernanda G Amaral; Luciana A Campos; Jose Cipolla-Neto
Journal:  Cell Mol Life Sci       Date:  2017-08-08       Impact factor: 9.261

6.  Prevention of ischemia/reperfusion-induced cardiac apoptosis and injury by melatonin is independent of glutathione peroxdiase 1.

Authors:  Zhongyi Chen; Chu C Chua; Jinping Gao; Kao-Wei Chua; Ye-Shih Ho; Ronald C Hamdy; Balvin H L Chua
Journal:  J Pineal Res       Date:  2008-12-11       Impact factor: 13.007

7.  Melatonin protects ADSCs from ROS and enhances their therapeutic potency in a rat model of myocardial infarction.

Authors:  Ping Zhu; Jianfeng Liu; Jinxin Shi; Qian Zhou; Jie Liu; Xianwei Zhang; Zhiyan Du; Qiaowei Liu; Yuanyuan Guo
Journal:  J Cell Mol Med       Date:  2015-06-17       Impact factor: 5.310

Review 8.  Melatonin: Pharmacology, Functions and Therapeutic Benefits.

Authors:  Sylvie Tordjman; Sylvie Chokron; Richard Delorme; Annaëlle Charrier; Eric Bellissant; Nemat Jaafari; Claire Fougerou
Journal:  Curr Neuropharmacol       Date:  2017-04       Impact factor: 7.363

9.  Between-trial heterogeneity in meta-analyses may be partially explained by reported design characteristics.

Authors:  Kirsty M Rhodes; Rebecca M Turner; Jelena Savović; Hayley E Jones; David Mawdsley; Julian P T Higgins
Journal:  J Clin Epidemiol       Date:  2017-12-05       Impact factor: 6.437

Review 10.  A step by step guide for conducting a systematic review and meta-analysis with simulation data.

Authors:  Gehad Mohamed Tawfik; Kadek Agus Surya Dila; Muawia Yousif Fadlelmola Mohamed; Dao Ngoc Hien Tam; Nguyen Dang Kien; Ali Mahmoud Ahmed; Nguyen Tien Huy
Journal:  Trop Med Health       Date:  2019-08-01
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