Thermoregulatory effects of melatonin in relation to sleepiness
- 1 January 2006
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Chronobiology International
- Vol. 23 (1-2) , 475-484
- https://doi.org/10.1080/07420520500545854
Abstract
Thermoregulatory processes have long been implicated in the initiation of human sleep. In this paper, we review our own studies conducted over the last decade showing a crucial role for melatonin as a mediator between the thermoregulatory and arousal system in humans. Distal heat loss, via increased skin temperature, seems to be intimately coupled with increased sleepiness and sleep induction. Exogenous melatonin administration during the day when melatonin is essentially absent mimics the endogenous thermophysiological processes occurring in the evening and induces sleepiness. Using a cold thermic challenge test, it was shown that melatonin‐induced sleepiness occurs in parallel with reduction in the thermoregulatory set‐point (threshold); thus, melatonin may act as a circadian modulator of the thermoregulatory set‐point. In addition, an orthostatic challenge can partially block the melatonin‐induced effects, suggesting an important role of the sympathetic nervous system as a link between the thermoregulatory and arousal systems. A topographical analysis of finger skin temperature with infrared thermometry revealed that the most distal parts of the fingers, i.e., fingertips, represent the important skin regions for heat loss regulation, most probably via opening the arteriovenous anastomoses, and this is clearly potentiated by melatonin. Taken together, melatonin is involved in the fine‐tuning of vascular tone in selective vascular beds, as circulating melatonin levels rise and fall throughout the night. Besides the role of melatonin as “nature's soporific”, it can also serve as nature's nocturnal vascular modulator.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Body temperature and sleep: Are they controlled by the same mechanism?Sleep and Biological Rhythms, 2004
- Relationships between the Circadian Rhythms of Finger Temperature, Core Temperature, Sleep Latency, and Subjective SleepinessJournal of Biological Rhythms, 2004
- The administration of exogenous melatonin during the daytime lowers the thermoregulatory setpoint in humansJournal of Thermal Biology, 2002
- Warm feet promote the rapid onset of sleepNature, 1999
- Daytime melatonin and temazepam in young adult humans: equivalent effects on sleep latency and body temperaturesThe Journal of Physiology, 1999
- Fatigue, alcohol and performance impairmentNature, 1997
- Rapid Decline in Body Temperature Before Sleep: Fluffing the Physiological Pillow?Chronobiology International, 1994
- Human Sleep: Its Duration and Organization Depend on Its Circadian PhaseScience, 1980
- DAY-NIGHT VARIATION IN HEAT BALANCEPublished by Elsevier ,1974
- Thermal Conductance in Man: Its Dependence on Time of Day and on Ambient TemperaturePublished by Springer Nature ,1972