Dear Editor:
I had heard a lot about melatonin's
ability to relieve jet lag but figured it was
just another fad. Nonetheless, I gave it a
tr y. After a flight from the U.S. to
Singapore, I took two 2-mg tablets for the
first four nights and noticed a significant
difference in how quickly I adjusted to the
time shift. I've traveled across the Pacific many times and normally battle
daytime sleepiness for at least four days, sometimes six. But this time, although
I was tired on the first day, I was functional, and on the second day
I was astonishingly alert. It did not make me sleep through the night, but
despite less sleep, I felt fine during the day. I am surprised. I'll do it again.
C. B., Singapore
Dear C. B.:
Humans manufacture their own melatonin, a hormone produced by
the pineal gland that signals the body when to sleep. For years, savvy travelers
have taken an inexpensive synthetic melatonin (available in health-food
stores) to reduce or eliminate jet lag. While some people pooh-pooh it, Dr.
Josephine Arendt, writing last year in the British Medical Journal, noted that
"there is substantial published evidence that melatonin can improve both
the subjective and objective symptoms of jet lag."
There are a few dosage theories, but because they've never been thoroughly
tested, they remain theories. Dr. Arendt says, "Dose-response studies
suggest that for clock-related problems, 5 mg is more efficient than
lower doses." A customer-relations representative at Natrol, a manufacturer
of melatonin, recommends up to 6 mg. Everyone seems to recommend
taking it an hour before bedtime at the new destination, and on subsequent
nights if traveling across a lot of time zones. Our editor John Q.
takes up to 5 mg. When I travel across several time zones, I tend to be way
out of sync for a couple of days, so I take up to 12 mg; however, I'm a
believer in the theory that anything worth doing is worth doing to excess.
Dr. Arendt notes that evidence shows it can effectively induce sleep
even if you're not flying. Dr. Terry Willard, a herbalist with Natrol, says that
it helps insomnia in about half the people who try it. Peter Doskoch, writing
in Psychology Today, says, "For a good night's sleep, take 0.3 to 9 mg
about an hour before bedtime."
While no harmful side effects have yet been discovered (it's not well
researched), melatonin interrupts the sleep of some people and makes
others drowsy after waking. Russell J. Reiter, Ph.D., a professor of neuroendocrinology,
says melatonin shouldn't be used by women who are pregnant,
nursing, or trying to conceive; people with bad allergies, mental illness,
autoimmune disorders (rheumatoid arthritis), or immune-system cancers
(lymphoma or leukemia); and those taking steroids. People taking antidepressants
should not take it either. Diving to 120 feet while loaded up on
melatonin is a risk that's never been researched -- and probably won't.
Further aids to minimizing jet lag include avoiding alcohol and caffeine
and drinking plenty of water. If you're flying eastward at night, avoid
meals and try to sleep through as much of the flight as possible. (You might
want to take a mild sleeping pill or muscle relaxant, but make sure its effects
don't last longer than the flight.) Whichever way you go, reset your
watch upon arrival, start eating meals on the new time zone's schedule,
and don't go to sleep until bedtime.
Ben Davison