SleepCited

Effects of L-tryptophan on sleepiness and on sleep.

E Hartmann
Review Journal of psychiatric research None 102 citations

Study Design

Study Type
Review
Population
Subjects with mild insomnia, normal subjects with longer-than-average sleep latency, and severe insomniacs across 40 controlled studies
Intervention
Effects of L-tryptophan on sleepiness and on sleep. 1 g or more
Comparator
Placebo or control conditions
Primary Outcome
Sleepiness (subjective) and sleep latency
Effect Direction
Positive
Risk of Bias
Unclear

Abstract

Over the past 20 yr, 40 controlled studies have been described concerning the effects of L-tryptophan on human sleepiness and/or sleep. The weight of evidence indicates that L-tryptophan in doses of 1 g or more produces an increase in rated subjective sleepiness and a decrease in sleep latency (time to sleep). There are less firm data suggesting that L-tryptophan may have additional effects such as decrease in total wakefulness and/or increase in sleep time. Best results (in terms of positive effects on sleep or sleepiness) have been found in subjects with mild insomnia, or in normal subjects reporting a longer-than-average sleep latency. Mixed or negative results occur in entirely normal subjects--who are not appropriate subjects since there is "no room for improvement". Mixed results are also reported in severe insomniacs and in patients with serious medical or psychiatric illness.

TL;DR

The weight of evidence indicates that L-tryptophan in doses of 1 g or more produces an increase in rated subjective sleepiness and a decrease in sleep latency (time to sleep).

Used In Evidence Reviews