Abstract

Background: Sleep disturbances are a hallmark of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), yet few studies have evaluated the role of dysregulated endogenous melatonin secretion in this condition. Methods: This study compared the sleep quality and nocturnal salivary melatonin profiles of Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) personnel diagnosed with PTSD, using the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS score ≥50), with two healthy CAF control groups; comprising, a “light control” (LC) group with standardized evening light exposure and “normal control” (NC) group without light restriction. Participants were monitored for 1-week using wrist actigraphy to assess sleep quality, and 24-h salivary melatonin levels were measured (every 2h) by immunoassay on the penultimate day in a dim-light (< 5 lux) laboratory environment. Results: A repeated measures design showed that mean nocturnal melatonin concentrations for LC were higher than both NC (p = .03) and PTSD (p = .003) with no difference between PTSD and NC. Relative to PTSD, NC had significantly higher melatonin levels over a 4-h period (01 to 05 h), whereas the LC group had higher melatonin levels over an 8-h period (23 to 07 h). Actigraphic sleep quality parameters were not different between healthy controls and PTSD patients, likely due to the use of prescription sleep medications in the PTSD group. Conclusions: These results indicate that PTSD is associated with blunted nocturnal melatonin secretion, which is consistent with previous findings showing lower melatonin after exposure to trauma and suggestive of severe chronodisruption. Future studies targeting the melatonergic system for therapeutic intervention may be beneficial for treatment-resistant PTSD.

Highlights

  • Degraded mental health remains prevalent and impactful in military personnel [1, 2], and has significant implications for operational readiness and force sustainability [3,4,5]

  • According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual 5th Edition (DSM-5) criteria [7], Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is characterized by an array of affective, cognitive and attention disturbances, that manifest as four clusters of symptoms

  • We investigated whether salivary melatonin levels and sleep patterns are different in Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) military personnel with PTSD when compared to matched healthy CAF members as controls, by assessing daily sleep quality for 7 days and measuring 24-h salivary melatonin secretion on the eighth day of study

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Summary

Introduction

Degraded mental health remains prevalent and impactful in military personnel [1, 2], and has significant implications for operational readiness and force sustainability [3,4,5]. Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a chronic and disabling neuropsychiatric condition that develops in a subset of individuals after exposure to traumatic or extremely stressful events [6]. According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual 5th Edition (DSM-5) criteria [7], PTSD is characterized by an array of affective, cognitive and attention disturbances, that manifest as four clusters of symptoms. By the very nature of their profession, military personnel can be exposed to traumatic stressors (i.e., combat, injury, witnessing suffering, and/or death) and are at high risk for developing PTSD following war-zone deployment(s) [8,9,10,11]. Sleep disturbances are a hallmark of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), yet few studies have evaluated the role of dysregulated endogenous melatonin secretion in this condition

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