Chronobiology, cognitive function and depressive symptoms in surgical patients.

Sep 5, 2014Danish medical journal

Body Clock, Thinking Skills, and Depression Symptoms in Surgery Patients

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Abstract

Melatonin reduced the risk of developing depressive symptoms and increased sleep efficiency in patients with breast cancer after surgery.

  • The specific clock gene genotype PER(5/5) was not associated with postoperative cognitive dysfunction one week after non-cardiac surgery.
  • If PER3(5/5) is linked to postoperative cognitive dysfunction, the increase in risk is less than 10%.
  • Melatonin influence was observed in reducing depressive symptoms and increasing total sleep time postoperatively.
  • No significant effects of melatonin were found on anxiety, sleep quality, sleepiness, general well-being, or pain.
  • The study indicated that melatonin treatment for three months did not result in serious adverse effects.
  • A systematic review found insufficient evidence for the prophylactic or therapeutic effect of melatonin on depressive symptoms in adult patients.

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