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Altered Neuroendocrine Sleep Architecture in Patients with Type 1 Diabetes

  1. Kamila Jauch-Chara, MD1,
  2. Sebastian M. Schmid, MD2,
  3. Manfred Hallschmid, PhD3,
  4. Jan Born, PhD3 and
  5. Bernd Schultes, MD (bernd.schultes{at}kssg.ch)2,,4
  1. 1Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
  2. 2Internal Medicine I and
  3. 3Neuroendocrinology, University of Luebeck, Luebeck, Germany and
  4. from the 4Interdisciplinary Obesity Center, Kantonsspital St. Gallen, Switzerland

    Abstract

    Objective: The modulatory influence of nocturnal sleep on neuroendocrine secretory activity is increasingly recognized as a factor critical to health. Disturbances of sleep may arise from and contribute to the disease process in chronically ill patients suffering from type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM).

    Research Design And Methods: Neuroendocrine sleep architecture was assessed under well-controlled non-hypoglycemic conditions in 14 T1DM patients and 14 healthy controls matched for age, gender, and BMI, using standard polysomnography and repetitive blood sampling.

    Results: As expected, plasma glucose (P = 0.02) and serum insulin (P < 0.001) levels were constantly higher in T1DM patients than in healthy subjects throughout the night. Beside these characteristic alterations of glucose metabolism, T1DM patients displayed higher blood levels of growth hormone (P = 0.001) and epinephrine (P = 0.02) during the entire night, and higher levels of ACTH (P = 0.01) as well as a tendency towards higher cortisol levels (P = 0.072) during the first night-half, compared with healthy controls. Patients spent slightly less time in slow wave sleep (P = 0.09) during the first night-half (where this sleep stage predominates), and overall exhibited an increased proportion of stage 2 sleep (P = 0.01). Correspondingly, assessment of mood and symptoms after sleep revealed that subjective sleep was less restorative in T1DM patients than in healthy subjects.

    Conclusions: Our data indicate distinct alterations in the neuroendocrine sleep architecture of patients with T1DM which add to the generally adverse impact of the disease on the patients' health.

    Footnotes

      • Received October 14, 2007.
      • Accepted February 16, 2008.

    This Article

    1. Diabetes Care
    1. All Versions of this Article:
      1. dc07-1986v1
      2. 31/6/1183 most recent
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