The main objective of this study is the objective evaluation of disease related sleep fragmentation in subjects with type 1 diabetes.
The influence of sleep duration and sleep schedules (social jetlag) on glycemic control in type 1 diabetes has been shown in several previous studies, including by the investigators of this study. Following these publications, patients have expressed the opinion via social networks that type 1 diabetes disease is itself a factor that alters the quality of sleep. Indeed, it appears that the cross-sectional studies published to date have focused on the association between the subjects' sleep habits and the balance of their diabetes, without having questioned the role of the pathology on sleep quality. The main objective of this study is the objective evaluation of disease related sleep fragmentation in subjects with type 1 diabetes.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
100
Online questionnaire on the impact of type 1 diabetes on sleep quality
Grenoble Alpes university hospital
Grenoble, France
RECRUITINGObjective sleep fragmentation
Number of nocturnal awakenings objectively measured by the number of voluntary glycemia tests performed during the sleep period, according to freestyle recordings.
Time frame: 1 week
Subjective sleep fragmentation
Number of self-reported awakenings by patients
Time frame: 1week
Subjective sleep quality
Analogical scale (from 0 to 10) to grade overall sleep quality
Time frame: 1 week
Subjective impact of type 1 diabetes on sleep quality.
Analogical scale (from 0 to 10) to grade overall sleep quality
Time frame: 1 week
Sleep fragmentation by subgroups
Comparison of the number of nocturnal awakenings due to the disease between the following subgroups : * Men versus women * By age categories (quartiles) * According to diabetes control
Time frame: 1 week
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