Diabetes in pregnancy
tied to altered fat cells in adult offspring
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[March 07, 2017] By
Lisa Rapaport
(Reuters Health) - When pregnant mothers
have diabetes, their children may have altered fat cells that make
metabolic diseases in adulthood more likely, a small Danish study
suggests.
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Babies of mothers with diabetes may be exposed to high blood sugar
levels in the womb, a condition known as fetal hyperglycemia.
“Fetal hyperglycemia affects fat stem cells and these defects can be
detected several years later,” said lead study author Ninna Schioler
Hansen of the University of Copenhagen in Denmark.
In lab tests, adult offspring of women who had diabetes during
pregnancy appeared to have larger fat cells and more leptin, a
protein made by fat cells that influences hunger.
“If (high blood sugar) or diabetes is present during pregnancy, our
study supports the importance of aiming at normal blood glucose
levels to reduce the negative impact on the cells of the unborn
baby,” Hansen added by email
“Women who are lean and fit before pregnancy have a reduced risk of
developing gestational diabetes during pregnancy,” Hansen said.
Hansen’s team studied 206 adults, including some whose mothers had
diabetes before pregnancy, others whose mothers developed a
condition known as gestational diabetes during pregnancy, and a
control group with mothers who didn’t have diabetes at all.
Adult offspring of women with diabetes in pregnancy showed
“fundamental changes” in the size of their fat cells, their ability
to store fat as well as the way their bodies produced the hormone
leptin, which influences appetite regulation in the brain, Hansen
said.
It’s possible that differences between adults with and without
mothers who had diabetes during pregnancy might be explained by
other factors that happened during fetal development, the authors
note in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism.
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Even so, the results offer clues to explain the increased diabetes
risk among children born to mothers with diabetes, said Dr. Joachim
Dudenhausen, an obstetrics and gynecology researcher at Weill
Cornell Medicine in New York who wasn’t involved in the study.
Changes induced by hyperglycemia in the mother “can be responsible
for diabetes of the child in later life,” Dudenhausen said by email.
The best prevention is for women to start pregnancy at a normal
weight and gain a healthy amount of weight while they’re growing
their babies.
Women who start out at a normal healthy weight should gain 25 to 35
pounds during pregnancy, while women who are overweight to start
should gain no more than 25 pounds, according to the U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
“One of the highest risk factors for gestational diabetes is being
overweight before and during pregnancy,” Dudenhausen said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2lOKrtL Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and
Metabolism, online February 13, 2017.
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