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Gestational diabetes risk

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology,
January 2010
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Gestational diabetes risk

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Women with a family history of diabetes who are free from the disease themselves are more likely to develop pregnancy-related diabetes. And the risks associated with having a brother or sister who is diabetic are much higher than having one or even two parents with the disease.

The increased demands placed on the body during pregnancy can cause some women to develop abnormally high blood sugar. The condition, known medically as gestational diabetes, typically gets better after a woman delivers her baby, but it increases her risk of developing type 2 diabetes later on. The more relatives a person has with type 2 diabetes, the greater their risk of developing the condition themselves. But little is known about how a woman's family history of the condition affects her risk of developing gestational diabetes.

To investigate, researchers looked at 4,566 women participating in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey in America, all of whom had at least one child. Ninety-seven percent had never been diagnosed with diabetes, about 1 percent had gestational diabetes only, and 2 percent had type 2 diabetes.

It was found that having a mother or father with diabetes increased the likelihood of having diabetes or gestational diabetes to a similar degree. But while having two parents with diabetes boosted the likelihood of having diabetes eight-fold, this only doubled the likelihood of gestational diabetes. On the other hand, having a diabetic brother or sister increased gestational diabetes risk more than seven-fold, but only slightly upped type 2 diabetes risk.

The odds of gestational diabetes increased most markedly when a sibling was affected. And when the researchers accounted for early-life factors such as education and poverty, the risk associated with having a diabetic sibling actually increased. The findings suggest that gestational diabetes may follow a different pattern of inheritance than type 2 diabetes, which is closely associated with being overweight or obese.

However, further investigations of these patterns could help identify women who are at particularly high risk of developing type 2 diabetes after having the gestational form of the condition and thus target them for future prevention interventions.

Friday, 15 January 2010


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