Melatonin is a pineal hormone that regulates the human cycle of sleep and wakefulness. Plasma melatonin levels were investigated in patients with obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome (OSAS). In total, 20 patients with OSAS and 11 healthy controls were studied. OSAS patients were tested twice: on the night of diagnostic polysomnography and the night of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) titration. Controls were tested on one occasion. Plasma melatonin levels were determined at 23:00 h (light period), at 02:00 h (dark period) and at 06:00 h (light period) in patients and control subjects using the radioimmunoassay method. The control subjects showed a nocturnal melatonin peak value at 02:00 h (70.6+/-14 pg.mL(-1)). However, this nocturnal melatonin peak was absent in the OSAS patients. The highest melatonin value was found in OSAS patients on the night of diagnosis, at 06:00 h (49.3+/-36.8 pg.mL(-1)). It was found that the melatonin level in OSAS patients at 06:00 h was significantly lower in the night of titration (35.6+/-37.9 pg.mL(-1)) than in the diagnosis night. However, the melatonin levels at either 23:00 h or 02:00 h in OSAS patients did not differ significantly when comparing levels in the night of diagnostic polysomnography (23:00 h: 31.6+/-29.8 pg.mL(-1); 02:00 h: 47.4+/-33.8 pg.mL(-1)) with levels in the night of CPAP titration (23:00 h: 20.2+/-10.3 pg.mL(-1); 02:00 h: 37.7+/-27.5 pg.mL(-1)). Patients with obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome have an abnormal melatonin secretion pattern. The absence of a nocturnal serum melatonin peak could be partially related to the difficulty that these patients have in achieving a normal sleep-wakefulness pattern.