Melatonin Pills Conway AR

This page provides useful content and local businesses that can help with your search for Melatonin Pills. You will find helpful, informative articles about Melatonin Pills, including "Will Melatonin Help You Sleep?". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Conway, AR that will answer all of your questions about Melatonin Pills.

Walgreens
501-328-3117
505 Salem Rd
Conway, AR
Walgreens
501-327-5638
850 Oak Street
Conway, AR
Walmart Supercenter
(501) 329-0023
1155 Hwy 65 North
Conway, AR
Walgreens
501-803-3274
115 Commons Drive
Maumelle, AR
Walgreens
501-833-2603
8521 Highway 107
Sherwood, AR
Walmart Supercenter
(501) 328-9570
3900 Dave Ward Drive
Conway, AR
Target
(501) 328-5739
501 Elsinger Blvd
Conway, AR
Walmart Supercenter
(501) 851-6102
12001 Maumelle Boulevard
Maumelle, AR
Walmart Supercenter
(501) 833-0972
9053 Hwy 107
Sherwood, AR
Walmart Supercenter
(501) 354-0290
1621 North Business 9
Morrilton, AR

Will Melatonin Help You Sleep?

If you're tossing, turning, and looking for alternative ways to get to sleep, melatonin supplements might help. But then again, they might not. Here's why.

You produce your own melatonin, a hormone that's made in the brain and works with your circadian rhythm, or sleep-wake cycle, to help you know when it's time to sleep and when it's time to wake up. Your blood levels of melatonin rise at night, or whenever you find yourself in darkness, and drop when the sun comes up, or whenever you are exposed to light.

Knowing the relationship between  natural melatonin and circadian rhythms, many people with insomnia, jet lag or other disruptive sleep issues try melatonin supplements as a sleep aid, with varying degrees of success. Although health experts do not know for sure exactly how supplemental melatonin affects the sleep cycle, the various types of melatonin sold by reputable supplement manufacturers in health food stores, pharmacies and online are generally considered safe, at least for short-term use of up to several weeks. Some of the side effects reported by people who have taken melatonin supplements include headaches, dizziness, irritability and drowsiness the following day

Different formulations of melatonin, in varying doses, have been used in clinical studies to try to determine what effect, if any, the supplemental hormone has on individual sleep rhythms and sleep issues related to various conditions, such as jet lag, aging and insomnia that is secondary to other medical conditions. Mostly conflicting results have been reported. No studies have shown that people with naturally low levels of melatonin in their blood get any more benefit from supplements than people with normal levels of melatonin. In other words, many people who have naturally low blood levels of melatonin are able to enjoy a normal night's sleep. Yet, a study performed by Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) researchers found that when older men and women who suffer from varying degrees of insomnia are given melatonin supplements, their blood levels of melatonin rise and their sleep is improved.

Melatonin supplements are usually made from a synthetic version of the hormone, and are available as pills and capsules to be swallowed, and in tablet and liquid dropper form to be dissolved in your mouth, either under your tongue or through your cheek. Although sold in much higher doses, the research team at MIT found that 0.3 mg was an optimal dose for improving sleep ...

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