10% of the population suffers from excessive daytime sleepiness. This can be explained by a variety of etiologies: psychiatric disorders, altered sleep quantity or quality, hypersomnia... The consequences on quality of life are not negligible, with emotional, academic, social, financial and somatic repercussions. Diagnosing and managing them is essential. This is the role of the HFME's Child Sleep Service, a reference center for rare narcolepsy and hypersomnia, which carries out a weekly hypersomnia assessment. In this context, the investigators are carrying out a retrospective descriptive study, the primary objective of which is to describe the results and diagnoses of hypersomnia check-ups in the HFME's Sleep Department, in order to obtain feedback on the center's activity and its evolution. The secondary objectives are to characterize the patients in the different diagnostic groups, to highlight factors associated with the different diagnoses, and to describe changes in patient characteristics over time.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
400
age, sex and place of residence, socioeconomic level, education, anthropometric data, first-degree family history, screen time, physical activity time, sleep time, comorbidity, drug treatments, education, total IQ, results of Epworth, CDI, ISI, ADHD, CONNERS, SCSC, Horne and Ostberg questionnaires, hearing aids, referring professional, melatonin dosage, ferritinemia, etiology of sleepiness
Service d'épileptologie clinique, des troubles du sommeil et de neurologie fonctionnelle de l'enfant - Hôpital Femme Mère Enfant
France, Bron, France
Describe the results and diagnoses of hypersomnia assessments in the HFME Sleep Department
Time frame: Feedback consultation 1 month after inpatient assessment
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