The Importance of Melatonin in Relieving Sleep Apnea

As important as CPAP is in alleviating the symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea, consideration should also be given to other factors which may affect your sleep. 

Good, consistent nights of restorative sleep are important for overall well-being, so addressing the factors which help us sleep is important, too. One of these factors is melatonin, a hormone which helps control your sleep cycle.

The Importance of the Body Clock for Sleep

Melatonin is a hormone produced naturally by the brain and helps regulate the internal ‘body clock’. Its production is in response to light, with more being produced as darkness falls before dropping away again in the light of the early morning. These extra levels of the hormone produced overnight help you stay asleep and its production is basically a signal for sleep. 

The hormone is therefore essential in achieving a good pattern of sleep. Only when you are consistently getting to sleep each night can a treatment such as CPAP therapy operate effectively in order to reduce the disruptive overnight impact of obstructive sleep apnea.

Boosting Sleep

As the hormone plays such an essential role in the sleep cycle, eating foods which boost its levels can be beneficial. Such foods include raspberries, strawberries, bananas, tomatoes, oats, almonds, flaxseed and oats. Incorporating these foods within a balanced diet could help you if you struggle to sleep for any reason.

For an additional boost, a melatonin supplement could be taken in consultation with your doctor. Your doctor can advise on the dosage to take as not much should be required to notice the benefits. It may take around 30 minutes for the supplement to work and for the signals for the body to prepare for sleep to take effect. Always ensure you are at home or where you will be sleeping if away from home before taking your supplement --to avoid becoming drowsy while driving or while out and about in general.

Enhancing CPAP

By boosting the hormone which promotes sleep a supplement can help enhance your CPAP treatment. Yet there are also environmental considerations which may help with the effectiveness of the supplement. 

Melatonin responds to light and therefore the effect of artificial light needs to be taken in to account, too. Just as we accept a darkened bedroom aids sleep, artificial light from screens such as smartphones and tablets can also be detrimental to falling asleep. 

This remains true if you use a supplement to boost your hormone levels as any light, natural or artificial, can reduce its effectiveness. Therefore, as well as a darkened bedroom you should look to avoid using any screens for around an hour before going to bed and to try and avoid using bright lights around the home during the evening.

The bedroom environment set up as a place to sleep is key for all the factors to work together and enhance your CPAP treatment. As well as taking lighting in to consideration you need to find certain other optimal conditions which best encourages sleep. These can include:

  • mattress comfort
  • room temperature
  • avoiding alcohol before bedtime
  • avoiding certain foods in the evening

Research suggests 72 degrees Fahrenheit is the ideal temperature for a bedroom to encourage sleep, yet ultimately everyone is different. For sleep apnea sufferers it may take a little trial and error to find what works best for you, in turn allowing CPAP to alleviate your sleep disorder symptoms as you sleep. 

By working with your doctor, you can consult on all the factors which affect sleep including taking supplements and the appropriate dosage. 

Supplement Awareness

It may seem logical that if a hormone supplement promotes better sleep, then more of the supplement will promote even more sleep. In fact, taking too much of the supplement is more likely to be counterproductive to sleep as it can result in the type of side effects which are detrimental to sleep, including nausea, headaches and irritability. 

Too much melatonin supplement can also make you drowsy or groggy during the day and lead to vivid dreams at night which can keep you awake. As the hormone plays a large role in regulating your ‘body clock’ taking too much of the supplement may have the affect of throwing your ‘body clock’ out of sync, making sleeping at night harder.

This is why consulting with your doctor on dosage is important so you reap the required benefits and do not experience additional sleeping issues instead. Your doctor may also advise against you taking these supplements if you are on certain medications and also if you are pregnant, breastfeeding or suffering with an auto-immune disorder or depression.

Talk to Your Sleep Specialist

Sleep apnea is a debilitating sleep disorder which left untreated can increase the risk of serious health complications. Once diagnosed, your doctor will work with you to recommend the best treatment course for the severity of the disorder you are experiencing. 

This may involve CPAP, which will require persistent adherence to benefit and alleviate the symptoms of the disorder and give restorative sleep. Yet melatonin is key to the sleep cycle and maintaining the right levels of the production of this hormone will help boost your sleep pattern, providing the necessary conditions in which CPAP can be more effective.