While so-called gestational diabetes has long been linked to an
increased risk of heart disease later in life, some previous
research suggests this risk may depend on whether the condition
evolves into type 2 diabetes that persists after delivery.
Researchers examined data from nine previous studies with almost 5.4
million mothers. Overall, about 8,000 women with a history of
gestational diabetes experienced cardiovascular events like heart
attacks and strokes, as did more than 93,000 women without this
pregnancy complication.
"This study demonstrates that women with gestational diabetes have a
2-fold higher risk of major cardiovascular events than their peers,"
said senior study author Dr. Ravi Retnakaran of the University of
Toronto.
"This increased risk is not dependent upon (type 2 diabetes),"
Retnakaran said by email. "The risk differential between women with
gestational diabetes and their peers emerges within the first decade
after pregnancy."
Compared to women who didn't have gestational diabetes, those who
did had a 2.3-fold greater risk of events like heart attacks and
strokes within the first decade after giving birth.
Even when researchers looked only at women who didn't have type 2
diabetes after pregnancy, they still found gestational diabetes
associated with a 56 percent higher risk of serious cardiac events.
Type 2 diabetes is associated with obesity and aging and has long
been linked to an increased risk of cardiovascular problems like
heart attacks and strokes.
While the study wasn't designed to prove whether or how gestational
diabetes might directly cause cardiovascular events, it's possible
that risk factors like obesity might contribute to both diabetes in
pregnancy and heart problems down the line, researchers write in
Diabetologia.
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"Although it is not entirely clear, most people believe that
pregnancy is like a stress test for future diabetes and heart
disease," said Dr. Jacinda Mawson Nicklas, a researcher at the
University of Colorado School of Medicine in Aurora who wasn't
involved in the study.
"So it is not that gestational diabetes causes increased risk, but
that when a woman gets gestational diabetes she is revealing an
increased risk that was already there," Nicklas said by email.
Women who do develop gestational diabetes may need regular heart
health checkups even while they're still relatively young, the study
authors conclude.
There's a lot women can do to lower their risk of cardiovascular
disease before they conceive, Nicklas said. This includes starting
pregnancy at a healthy weight and exercising and eating well during
pregnancy.
"However gestational diabetes is common and can happen even in
normal weight women," Nicklas said. "If a woman gets gestational
diabetes it is important to work closely with her doctor to control
her blood sugars"
After pregnancy, women who have had gestational diabetes should
maintain a heart healthy diet and lifestyle and see their doctor for
screening, said Dr. Jennifer Stuart of Brigham and Women's Hospital
and Harvard Medical School in Boston.
"Adopting a healthy lifestyle after pregnancy - eating a healthy
diet, being physically active, not smoking, and not being overweight
or obese - may reduce the risk of heart disease and stroke in women
with a history of gestational diabetes," Stuart, who wasn't involved
in the study, said by email.
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2U0VF4p Diabetologia, online March 7, 2019.
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