Melatonin May Ease Sleep Problems in Autistic Children

Small study finds over-the-counter melatonin reduces time to slumber

Posted: April 17, 2009

FRIDAY, April 17 (HealthDay News) -- Over-the-counter melatonin supplements may help treat sleep problems in children with autism, a small U.S. study shows.

The study included 12 children, aged 2 to 15 years, with autism spectrum disorder, fragile X syndrome (FXS), or both. The participants were randomly selected to take melatonin or a placebo for two weeks. After they completed the first two weeks of the study, the children were switched over to the alternate treatment for another two weeks.

Taking the melatonin increased sleep duration by 21 minutes, shortened sleep-onset latency by 28 minutes, and reduced sleep-onset time by 42 minutes, compared to the placebo. The findings were published in the April 15 issue of the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine.

Over-the-counter melatonin supplements benefit children of all ages and help alleviate some of the additional stress experienced by parents of special-needs children, said senior author Beth L. Goodlin-Jones, of the M.I.N.D. Institute at the University of California Davis Health System in Sacramento.

"Sleep-onset problems at the beginning of the night are very troublesome for children and their families. Sometimes children may take one to two hours to fall asleep, and often they disrupt the household during this time," she said in an American Academy of Sleep Medicine news release.

Goodlin-Jones and colleagues noted that sleep problems occur in up to 89 percent of children with autism and 77 percent of children with FXS, an inherited form of mental impairment that's the most commonly known cause of autism.

Over-the-counter melatonin supplements, behavior therapies and sleep hygiene practices should be used to manage sleep problems in children with autism and FXS, the researchers recommended.

More information

The U.S. National Library of Medicine has more about melatonin.

Dosage?

Why does this article exclude mention of the dosages used?

Nicolas Martin of IN @ Jun 23, 2009 10:10:25 AM

My child takes melatonin

One child does not constitute a general result, but what is true about melatonin and my daughter is that it helps her fall asleep. The difference is dramatic; without melatonin, she will fight sleep and stay up as long as she possibly can. With melatonin, she falls asleep fairly quickly--about a half an hour after we give it to her.

What is not true about it (though this article suggests it, and it may be true in some children with autism) in our case is that it does not improve sleep duration. It does make the duration fairly predictable. She wakes up when there is daylight when she has taken melatonin. More often than not, if she doesn't take it, she sleeps longer.

Greg Reich of MI @ Apr 18, 2009 09:42:34 AM

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