Coronary artery calcification is the accumulation of calcified fatty deposits on the inside of the arteries that supply blood to the heart. Their presence  is a predictor of future coronary heart disease. Researchers from the University of Chicago in Illinois report that sleeping longer is associated with lower calcification.

Let’s review the research and reviews from 2008 that looked at CAM options to treat insomnia.

Abdominal acupuncture

  • In a study of 44 women by researchers at Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine in China, it was more effective than the benzodiazepine drug estazolam (ProSom, Eurodin).

Tai chi

  • Researchers from the Cousins Center for Psychoneuroimmunology in Los Angeles reported that tai chi improved sleep quality, habitual sleep efficiency, sleep duration, and sleep disturbance.

Night exercising

  • Researchers from the Federal University of Sao Paulo in Brazil reported a 21% increase in total sleep time — from about 5 hours to 6 hours.

Mindfulness meditation

  • When combined with cognitive-behavior therapy there are reductions in both sleep and sleep-related arousal, according to researchers from Stanford University Medical Center in California

Melatonin review on Medscape

  • Good quality evidence for sleep disturbances is not available, and “more research is needed to justify the use of melatonin for these other sleep conditions.”

Auricular acupuncture review

  • There are some positive studies. But “because of the paucity and… poor quality of the data,… rigorously designed trials are warranted to confirm these results.”

The bottom line?
Overall, several CAM options studied in 2008 resulted in positive outcome. Two other reviews, here and here, from 2007 are worth reading as well.

12/24/08 23:51 JR

Hi, I’m JR

John Russo, Jr., PharmD, is president of The MedCom Resource, Inc. Previously, he was senior vice president of medical communications at www.Vicus.com, a complementary and alternative medicine website.