Nutritional Interventions for Sleep: Are They Helpful During (Peri)Menopause?
The Question
Can nutritional interventions (including dietary or herbal supplements) improve sleep during perimenopause and/or menopause?
Recommendation
Evidence does not suggest that any nutrition intervention objectively improves sleep in perimenopausal/ menopausal women.
However, the following interventions showed subjective (e.g. questionnaires, sleep diaries, estimated sleep duration) improvements in sleep in some studies:
Combined nutrition interventions (e.g. multiple concurrent interventions, such as omega-3 supplements plus yoga; 10/14 studies)
Combined herbal interventions (e.g. herbal formulas including more than one active ingredient, such as Panax ginseng, black cohosh, soy, and green tea extract; 8/11 studies)
Isoflavones (4/8 studies)
Soy (2/5 studies)
Black cohosh (2/3 studies)
Pollen (2/3 studies)
Melatonin (1/2 studies)
Purple yam (1/1 study)
Pomegranate seed oil (1/1 study)
JuicePLUS (1/1 study)
Jujube seed capsule (1/1 study)
Maca (1/1 study)
Proanthocyanin (1/1 study)
Salvia extract (1/1 study)
Overall, the evidence on this topic is of low methodological quality and results should be interpreted with caution.
Remarks
The composition of many combined nutrition and herbal interventions were not defined.
The term “menopause” refers to the permanent end of menstruation. Specifically, menopause is established when 12 consecutive menstruation-free months have passed. “Perimenopause”, or the “menopausal transition”, is the time surrounding menopause, beginning at the onset of menopause symptoms and ending when menopause has been established.
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