Here’s a full, balanced explanation of what’s behind the viral “heart surgeon warning” claim — based on the actual available evidence from recent research and reporting:
🧠 What the News Is Really About
Recent research presented at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2025 didn’t exactly say a pill weakens seniors’ hearts in a direct cause‑and‑effect way — but it did find a concerning link between long‑term use of a popular supplement (melatonin) and heart health outcomes. (American Heart Association)
This is likely what viral posts are referring to when they say “heart surgeon warns.” There was a study at a major cardiovascular meeting that raised questions about the safety of chronic melatonin use. (News-Medical)
🧪 What the Study Found (Summary)
- Researchers analyzed electronic health records for over 130,000 adults diagnosed with insomnia. (Medical News Today)
- People who used melatonin supplements for at least 12 months had:
- ~90% higher risk of being diagnosed with heart failure over 5 years
- ~3.5× higher chance of being hospitalized for heart failure
- Higher risk of death from any cause, compared with those who didn’t use melatonin long‑term (Healthline)
🔍 Important Nuances (Often Missing from Viral Claims)
✅ 1. Correlation Doesn’t Prove Causation
The study shows an association, not proof that melatonin caused heart failure. (Medical Xpress)
People who take melatonin long‑term may already have health issues — like chronic sleep problems or stress — that themselves raise heart risk. (Reddit)
✅ 2. Melatonin Isn’t Generally Dangerous Short‑Term
Doctors still consider short‑term use of melatonin safe for occasional sleeplessness or jet lag. (Healthline)
The concerns arose only with long‑term, year‑plus usage — especially at consistent daily doses.
✅ 3. The Data Has Limitations
Because the research used medical records rather than clinical follow‑ups, there are gaps — and some people categorized as not using melatonin may actually have taken it OTC without documentation. (Medical Xpress)
🩺 What Experts Are Saying
- Melatonin is a hormone, not just an innocuous supplement — and long‑term hormonal supplementation may affect systems differently than short use. (U.S. Food and Drug Administration)
- Poor sleep itself is a risk factor for heart disease, so the question could be whether the health condition associated with melatonin use is the real predictor of heart trouble. (Reddit)
- Most cardiologists recommend using the lowest effective dose for the shortest time necessary — and focusing on lifestyle measures for sleep first. (Healthline)
🧠 Bottom Line — What You Should Take Away
- No credible evidence shows melatonin universally “weakens” the heart in everyone, especially seniors.
- This study found a link between long‑term use and higher risk of heart failure and hospitalization, but it didn’t prove melatonin directly causes these outcomes. (American Heart Association)
- Short‑term or occasional melatonin use still appears generally safe.
- If you’re using melatonin nightly for months, especially if you’re over 60 or have heart risk factors, talk to a healthcare provider about safer sleep strategies.
🧠 Want the full study details or links to the original abstract?
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