Elevated serum melatonin is associated with the nocturnal worsening of asthma - 29/08/11
Abstract |
Background |
Increased airway inflammation at night contributes to the nocturnal worsening of asthma. In vitro studies have shown exogenous melatonin to be pro-inflammatory in asthma, but it is unknown whether endogenous melatonin levels are a controller of airway inflammation in nocturnal asthma.
Objective |
Our aim was to determine 24-hour patterns of serum melatonin and their relationship to overnight decline in physiology in subjects with nocturnal asthma, non-nocturnal asthma, and in healthy controls.
Methods |
Observational study of pulmonary physiology and melatonin levels in patients with nocturnal asthma (n = 7), non-nocturnal asthma (n = 13), and healthy controls (n = 11). Subjects maintained a constant sleep–wake regimen for 7 days. On day 8, serum melatonin was measured every 2 hours by radioimmunoassay and analyzed by cosinor modeling. The correlation between serum melatonin levels and overnight change in spirometry was evaluated by Spearman's rank correlation analysis.
Results |
In subjects with nocturnal asthma, peak melatonin levels were significantly elevated compared with healthy controls (67.6 ± 5.0 pg/mL versus 53.5 ± 4.0 pg/mL, P = .03). Melatonin acrophase was delayed in nocturnal asthma (02:54 versus 01:58 in healthy controls, P = .003, and 02:15 in non-nocturnal asthma, P = .01). In subjects with nocturnal asthma, increasing melatonin levels were significantly and inversely correlated with overnight change in FEV1 (r = −.79, P = .04), a relationship that was not observed in non-nocturnal asthma or healthy controls.
Conclusions |
Nocturnal asthma is associated with elevation and phase delay of peak serum melatonin levels. Elevated melatonin levels might contribute to the pathogenesis of nocturnal asthma.
El texto completo de este artículo está disponible en PDF.Keywords : Melatonin, circadian rhythm, inflammation
Abbreviations : AUC
Esquema
Supported by NIH grants R01 HL64804 and K23 HL04385. |
Vol 112 - N° 3
P. 513-517 - septembre 2003 Regresar al númeroBienvenido a EM-consulte, la referencia de los profesionales de la salud.
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