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Gestational Diabetes: Should It Be Added to the Syndrome of Insulin Resistance?
- Source :
- Diabetes Care. 20:867-871
- Publication Year :
- 1997
- Publisher :
- American Diabetes Association, 1997.
-
Abstract
- OBJECTIVE The significance of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) results from its short-term detrimental effects on the fetus and its long-term prediction of NIDDM in the mother. We compared several variables associated with insulin resistance between GDM and non-GDM pregnant women to show the similarities between GDM and NIDDM (and thus insulin resistance). RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS On the basis of a 3-h oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT), 52 GDM patients and 127 non-GDM patients were recruited from pregnant, non-diabetic women who had a nonfasting 1-h-50-g glucose screening test ≥ 7.2 mmol/l (130 mg/dl) performed between 16 and 33 weeks of gestation (a total of 518 of 3,041 women drawn from six community health care prenatal clinics were screened positive). During the OGTT, several potential markers of insulin resistance were measured at fasting and 2-h time points, in addition to the standard glucose measurements. The relationship of these variables with the diagnosis of GDM was studied. RESULTS GDM patients, compared with non-GDM patients, had 1) higher prepregnancy weight (P = 0.011), prepregnancy BMI (P = 0.006), C-peptide at fasting (P = 0.002) and at 2 h (P < 0.001), insulin at fasting (P = 0.001) and at 2 h (P < 0.001), triglycerides at fasting (P = 0.005) and at 2 h (P = 0.003), free fatty acids at fasting (P = 0.017), β-hydroxybutyrate at fasting (P = 0.007); and 2) lower HDL cholesterol at fasting (P = 0.029). These variables were all predictive of GDM (P < 0.036) individually. Using stepwise logistic regression with all of these variables available, fasting (P = 0.019) and 2-h (P < 0.001) insulin levels, fasting free fatty acids (P = 0.031), and fasting β-hydroxybutyrate (P = 0.036) were statistically significant as jointly predictive of GDM. Comparisons between GDM patients and non-GDM patients matched by BMI confirmed that the metabolic abnormalities persisted when difference in BMI was taken into account. Concomitant blood pressure measurements in women with GDM did not differ significantly from those without GDM. CONCLUSIONS Our results show that many of the known metabolic components of the syndrome of insulin resistance (syndrome X) are predictive of GDM. These results are in keeping with the argument that GDM is one phase of the syndrome of insulin resistance. We suggest that GDM be looked upon as a component of the syndrome of insulin resistance that provides an excellent model for the study and prevention of NIDDM in a relatively young age-group.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Blood Glucose
medicine.medical_specialty
Adolescent
endocrine system diseases
Lipoproteins
Pregnancy Trimester, Third
Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
medicine.medical_treatment
Blood Pressure
Body Mass Index
Impaired glucose tolerance
chemistry.chemical_compound
Insulin resistance
Pregnancy
Reference Values
Internal medicine
Diabetes mellitus
Odds Ratio
Internal Medicine
medicine
Humans
Insulin
Advanced and Specialized Nursing
Analysis of Variance
Glucose tolerance test
C-Peptide
medicine.diagnostic_test
C-peptide
business.industry
Body Weight
nutritional and metabolic diseases
Glucose Tolerance Test
medicine.disease
Lipids
Gestational diabetes
Diabetes, Gestational
Endocrinology
chemistry
Pregnancy Trimester, Second
Female
Insulin Resistance
business
Body mass index
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19355548 and 01495992
- Volume :
- 20
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Diabetes Care
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2f41038ac3994657579a071456522e64
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.2337/diacare.20.5.867