Diabetes and Pregnancy
 

Diabetes and Pregnancy

   

Diabetes in Pregnancy

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DIABETES IN PREGNANCY

 

DIABETES IN PREGNANCY - COMPLICATIONS - CONGENITAL ABNORMALITY

 

 

Obstet Gynecol. 1994 Oct;84(4):515-20.

Glycemic thresholds for spontaneous abortion and congenital malformations in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus.
Rosenn B, Miodovnik M, Combs CA, Khoury J, Siddiqi TA.

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Ohio.

Objectives:

To test the hypothesis that women with insulin-dependent (type I) diabetes have a threshold of glycemic control in early pregnancy for increased risks of spontaneous abortion and congenital malformations.

Methods:

Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curves were formed for the occurrence of abortion and malformations as a function of the median first-trimester preprandial blood glucose concentration and the first measured glycohemoglobin concentration in pregnant women with type I diabetes.

Results:

Fifty-two of the 215 women (24%) who enrolled before 9 weeks' gestation had spontaneous abortions. Six percent of the women enrolled before 14 weeks had infants with major congenital malformations. Thresholds for an increased risk of abortion and malformations were a median first-trimester blood glucose concentration of 120-130 mg/dL or an initial glycohemoglobin concentration of 12-13% (6.2-7.5 standard deviations above the normal mean).

Conclusions:

Type I diabetic women with initial glycohemoglobin concentrations in pregnancy above 12% or median first-trimester preprandial glucose concentrations above 120 mg/dL have an increased risk of abortion and malformations. Below these glycemic thresholds, the risks are comparable to those in nondiabetic women.

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DIABETES

Type 1
Gestational Diabetes