More babies
now born
to diabetic mothers
CHICAGO — More American women are entering
pregnancy with diabetes, raising the odds of a problem pregnancy
and the potential that their children will become diabetic in
the future, US researchers said on Monday.
They found that rates of diabetes before motherhood more than
doubled over six years among 175,000 teenage and adult women. The researchers
said the increase was likely tied to rising levels of diabetes and obesity in
the United States.
Having diabetes before pregnancy poses a particular risk
because it affects the developing fetus right from the start, they said. "It is
really important for women with diabetes to plan their pregnancies and seek
advice from their healthcare provider before they become pregnant," said Dr.
Jean Lawrence of healthcare provider Kaiser Permanente in Pasadena, California,
whose study appears in the journal Diabetes Care.
"Women who have a difficult time controlling their blood
sugar have a higher risk of miscarriage or stillbirth. They also have a high
risk of having a baby with a birth defect," Lawrence said in a telephone
interview. And the risks can carry over to the next generation, she said.
"Offspring of women who have diabetes or are overweight or obese during
pregnancy — these children are more likely to be obese, overweight or have
diabetes in the future," she said.
Past studies have looked at the rate of gestational diabetes,
a type of diabetes that typically develops in the second trimester of pregnancy
and often goes away after a woman gives birth.
Lawrence and colleagues looked at both gestational diabetes
and women who had type 1 diabetes, which is typically diagnosed in childhood,
and type 2 or adult-onset diabetes, in which the body loses its ability to use
insulin properly.
While there were twice as many births to women with diabetes
in 2005 as there were in 1999, the number of women with gestational diabetes
remained fairly stable.
Diabetes increased fivefold among 13-to 19-year-olds giving
birth and doubled among women 20- and 39-year-olds giving birth.
Black, Hispanic, and Asian/Pacific Islander women were more
likely to have diabetes before pregnancy than white women, the study found.
About 20.8 million Americans have diabetes, which causes about 5 percent of
all deaths globally each year. – Reuters