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Honey to Improve Sleep Quality

U

University of Saskatchewan

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Poor Quality Sleep

Treatments

Dietary Supplement: Raw Honey
Dietary Supplement: Comparator

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04207281
Bio-1666

Details and patient eligibility

About

Inadequate sleep quality and duration affects quality of life, and can cause adverse health outcomes, for many Canadians. Existing sleep therapies have limitations, such as inability to adhere to a cognitive behaviour modification or the risk of dependence on pharmaceutical therapies. Raw honey has a long history of anecdotal reports supporting its use to improve sleep quality. In an effort to develop an evidence base for honey as a sleep aid, we completed a preliminary proof-of-principle study to assess feasibility and potential effectiveness of honey to improve sleep quality. Results of our preliminary study demonstrate that honey is safe and effective for improving quality of sleep with no associated adverse effects, as compared to melatonin. The current study design builds off the experiences of the preliminary trial and will add more scientific rigor to the evidence base we have started to build.

Full description

Inadequate sleep quality and duration may result in adverse health outcomes and poorer quality of life. Research thus far identify interventions such as behavior modification and pharmaceuticals to aid sleep. According to Stats Canada (2007-2013 Canadian Health Measures Survey), despite these available interventions, roughly half of men and women (43% and 55%, respectively) aged 18-64 have difficulty falling or staying asleep; these results are similar to those reported in 2005. The lack of improvement in sleep might reflect important limitations with the current interventions; individuals with sleep disorders may find adherence to such interventions difficult to maintain (e.g. behavior modification) or the therapies may pose a risk (e.g. dependence on pharmaceuticals). There is a clear need for alternative therapeutic interventions, particularly those that are simple and cost effective.

Observational and anecdotal evidence supports honey as an alternative to promote better sleep. During sleep, the brain typically utilizes liver glycogen stores to provide continuous and adequate energy; foods that promote liver glycogen storage before sleep may ensure availability of this energy source and therefore lead to better sleep.4 Raw honey is a rapidly digestible and metabolizable dense energy source, and thus may provide this sleep time energy reserve. Additionally, honey may promote melatonin formation due to its possible tryptophan content (a precursor to melatonin) that both helps to initiate sleep as well as promote release of hormones that facilitate whole body recovery during sleep.

Based on this information, we completed a preliminary open-label proof-of-principle study to assess the feasibility and potential effectiveness of honey in improving sleep quality. In a cross-over study of poor sleepers, honey improved some areas of sleep compared to melatonin. The results of this study are the driving factor for the randomized, double-blind, cross-over study in poor sleepers proposed here.

Enrollment

110 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 55 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Aged 18 - 55yrs
  • Male or female
  • Able to comply with study protocol and give informed consent
  • Healthy (no diagnosis of medical or mental illness and not suffering from vascular disease, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, obesity [body mass index over 30], dermatological disease, gynecological disease, endocrine disease)
  • Discontinuation of sleep aids 4 weeks in advance of the study
  • Self-report of having difficulty sleeping for 1 week or more

Exclusion criteria

  • Age: <18 and >55
  • Type I and Type II diabetes, current infectious disease (e.g. cold or flu)
  • Unstable medical condition
  • History of psychiatric disorder (past or present)
  • Pain syndrome affecting sleep
  • Obese (BMI over 30)
  • Pregnant or lactating women
  • Lifestyle habits that would modify the wake-sleep rhythm (e.g. night work; shift work; young children that interrupt sleep)
  • Substance and/or drug dependence (alcohol, nicotine, pain killers)
  • Use of the following medications during the study period: oral or injectable corticosteroid, sedating antihistamines (e.g. cold, allergy, motion sickness), psychotropic medications or hypnotics, benzodiazepine, narcotics, any illicit drugs
  • Use of stimulants (>4 cups [1 cup = 250 mL] of coffee/day)
  • Participation in any other clinical trial with an investigational agent within one month prior to randomization

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

110 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

Honey
Active Comparator group
Description:
Raw honey (1.5 tablespoons)
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: Comparator
Dietary Supplement: Raw Honey
Comparator
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Honey comparator(1.5 tablespoons)
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: Comparator
Dietary Supplement: Raw Honey

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Whitney Duff, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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