The Safety of Melatonin in Humans.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the safety and potential adverse effects of exogenous melatonin in humans and provide recommendations for its use in specific patient groups.
Results Summary
Short-term melatonin use was found to be safe even in extreme doses, with only mild adverse effects reported. Long-term use also showed mild adverse effects comparable to placebo, though safety in children, adolescents, pregnant, and breastfeeding women requires further study.
Population
General human population, with specific considerations for children, adolescents, pregnant, and breastfeeding women.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Short-term and long-term use assessed
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
exogenous melatonin | no change | medical and surgical diseases | - | - | has been investigated as treatment for a number of medical and surgical diseases, demonstrating encouraging results | #1 |
short-term use of melatonin | no change | safety | animal and human studies | - | is safe | #2 |
exogenous melatonin | no change | serious adverse effects | - | no studies have indicated | should induce any serious adverse effects | #3 |
long-term melatonin treatment | no change | adverse effects | - | - | causes only mild adverse effects comparable to placebo | #4 |
exogenous melatonin | no change | safety | pregnant and breast-feeding women | - | should not take | #5 |
Exogenous melatonin has been investigated as treatment for a number of medical and surgical diseases, demonstrating encouraging results. The aim of this review was to present and evaluate the literature concerning the possible adverse effects and safety of exogenous melatonin in humans. Furthermore, we provide recommendations concerning the possible risks of melatonin use in specific patient groups. In general, animal and human studies documented that short-term use of melatonin is safe, even in extreme doses. Only mild adverse effects, such as dizziness, headache, nausea and sleepiness have been reported. No studies have indicated that exogenous melatonin should induce any serious adverse effects. Similarly, randomized clinical studies indicate that long-term melatonin treatment causes only mild adverse effects comparable to placebo. Long-term safety of melatonin in children and adolescents, however, requires further investigation. Due to a lack of human studies, pregnant and breast-feeding women should not take exogenous melatonin at this moment.