Melatonin may save eyesight in inflammatory disease
Current research suggests that melatonin therapy may help treat uveitis, a common inflammatory eye disease. The related report by Sande et al., "Therapeutic Effect of Melatonin in Experimental Uveitis," appears in the December issue of The American Journal of Pathology. People with uveitis develop sudden redness and pain in their eyes, and their vision rapidly deteriorates. Untreated, uveitis can lead to permanent vision loss, accounting for an estimated 10-15% of cases of blindness in the US. Uveitis has a wide variety of causes, including eye injury, cancer, infection, and autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis. There is currently no optimal treatment for uveitis. Corticoid steroid eye drops are often used; however, long-term corticoid use has many negative side effects, including the possible development of glaucoma.
Researchers lead by Dr. Ruth Rosenstein of The University of Buenos Aires and The National Research Council (CONICET) hypothesized that melatonin, which regulates sleep/wake cycles and reduces jet lag, may be able to prevent the ocular inflammation in uveitis. They found in an experimental model of uveitis that levels of two factors that contribute to inflammation, TNFα and NFκB, were reduced with melatonin treatment. Importantly, melatonin treatment also decreased the appearance of clinical symptoms of uveitis such as inflammation, blood vessel expansion and cataract, and protected the blood-ocular barrier integrity.
Taken together, the data from Sande et al suggest that "melatonin, which lacks adverse collateral effects even at high doses, could be a promising resource in the management of uveitis. Alone or combined with corticosteroid therapy, the anti-inflammatory effects of melatonin may benefit patients with chronic uveitis and decrease the rate and degree of corticosteroid-induced complications." Future studies will aim at understanding the mechanisms governing melatonin protection in the eye.
Source: American Journal of Pathology
Related
- Melatonin may be served as a potential anti-fibrotic drugMon, 30 Mar 2009, 13:29:18 EDT
- Key protein molecule linked to diverse human chronic inflammatory diseasesMon, 15 Sep 2008, 16:09:25 EDT
- Inflammatory bowel disease on the rise in specific populationsMon, 1 Jun 2009, 14:42:31 EDT
- Early onset gene for inflammatory bowel diseases identifiedTue, 2 Sep 2008, 10:35:41 EDT
- Diagnosis of pelvic inflammatory disease predicts high risk and rate of further infection in teenagersTue, 4 Nov 2008, 12:24:09 EST
Learn more about
Other sources
- Melatonin May Save Eyesight In Inflammatory Disease, Study Suggestsfrom Science DailySun, 23 Nov 2008, 8:21:41 EST
- Melatonin may save eyesight in inflammatory diseasefrom PhysorgSun, 23 Nov 2008, 6:49:14 EST
Sponsored links
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox!Next article
Teaching the teachersBreaking science news
- Primitive asteroids in the main asteroid belt may have formed far from the sunWed, 15 Jul 2009, 13:38:16 EDT
- Scientists decode genome of deadly parasitic wormWed, 15 Jul 2009, 15:50:25 EDT
- Alzheimer's risk: Would you want to know?Wed, 15 Jul 2009, 17:45:09 EDT
Popular science news articles
- In adolescence, girls react differently than boys to peers' judgments
- How the moon got its stripes
- Market-style incentives to increase school choice have opposite effect
- Researcher investigates the basis of Einstein's first approximation in the theory of relativity
- Fetal short-term memory found in 30-week-old fetuses
- Physical reality of string theory demonstrated
- Study finds that tobacco companies changed design of cigarettes without alerting smokers
- Green tea may affect prostate cancer progression
- Got ear plugs? You may want to sport them on the subway and other mass transit, researchers say
- Mechanics: Ordinary meets quantum
- In adolescence, girls react differently than boys to peers' judgments
- Tweens sensitive to others' perceptions of them
- Researcher investigates the basis of Einstein's first approximation in the theory of relativity
- Timing is everything: Growth factor keeps brain development on track
- Duke, UNC scientists create entirely new way to study brain function
- House cats know what they want and how to get it from you
- Survey finds surgical residents view duty hour regulations as a hindrance to training
- Global warming: Our best guess is likely wrong
- Tremors on southern San Andreas Fault may mean increased earthquake risk
- Climate change may spell demise of key salt marsh constituent