Even without diabetes, severely obese mothers were 67 percent more
likely to have children with mood and stress disorders than women
who maintained a healthy weight during pregnancy, the study found.
With preexisting diabetes, obese mothers were more than six times as
likely as other women to have children with ADHD, conduct issues or
autism. These kids were also more than four times as likely to have
emotional disorders.
"We found marked risks only for mothers with both severe obesity and
insulin-treated diabetes," when they became pregnant, said senior
study author Catharina Lavebratt, a researcher at Karolinska
University Hospital in Sweden.
"Diabetes with onset during the pregnancy did not imply any marked
effect on the risk for psychiatric disorder in the children,"
Lavebratt said by email.
While the absolute risk of these problems was low - for example less
than 1 percent of the children had autism or ADHD - the results
offer fresh evidence that the combined impact of obesity and
diabetes on offspring may be worse than either condition on its own,
the authors write in Pediatrics.
For the study researchers examined data on almost 650,000 live
births in Finland between 2004 and 2014. They followed children from
birth through the end of the study, up to age 11 years in some
cases.
Mothers were a healthy weight at the start of the majority of these
pregnancies. But they were overweight 21 percent of the time, obese
in nearly 8 percent of cases and severely obese in almost 4 percent
of the pregnancies.
Only 4,000 women, or less than 1 percent, had diabetes when they
conceived. Researchers focused only on women with type 2 diabetes,
which is associated with obesity.
Overall, almost 35,000 kids, or about 5.4 percent, were diagnosed
with a psychiatric disorder during the study period. This total
included developmental delays in things like speech and motor skills
in addition to conditions like autism, conduct disorders or ADHD.
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Obese mothers were 69 percent more likely than normal-weight women
to have kids with neurodevelopmental disorders and 88 percent more
likely to have children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD) or conduct problems.
The study wasn't designed to prove whether or how obesity or
diabetes alone or in combination might make women more likely to
have children with psychiatric problems.
Another limitation, the authors note, is that they only followed
babies born later in the study for a short period of time.
In addition, the study only counted women as diabetic if they were
prescribed insulin, which is usually reserved for more severe cases.
Researchers also identified obesity at one point in time, and the
amount of weight women gain during pregnancy may independently
influence children's risk of many physical and mental health
problems.
Still, the results underscore the potential for a range of
neurodevelopmental disorders to have environmental origins that
could potentially be predicted and prevented in some cases, said Dr.
Xiaobin Wang, director of the Center on the Early Life Origins of
Disease at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
"Reproductive age women can take an active role in maintaining a
healthy lifestyle and a healthy weight," Wang, who wasn't involved
in the study, said by email.
"Pregnant women can adhere to gestational weight gain and healthy
pregnancy recommendations," Wang added. "And newborns' future risk
can be evaluated and preemptive interventions could be initiated
early in life."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2vROblr Pediatrics, online August 9, 2018.
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