<p>New research shows that children exposed to gestational diabetes in the wombs are nearly six times more likely to develop diabetes or prediabetes than children who are not exposed.<br /><br /></p>.<p>With the increase in gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), there is a growing need to understand the effects of glucose exposure on the newborn in the womb, at birth and later in life, it adds.<br /><br />"Obese normal glucose-tolerant children of GDM mothers have pre-existing defects in beta cell function," said Dr Sonia Caprio from Yale University's school of medicine in New Haven.<br /><br />This is, in turn, a strong risk factor for these children to develop prediabetes or diabetes, Dr Caprio added.<br />For the study, researchers selected 255 obese adolescents with a normal glucose tolerance and were investigated for in utero exposure to GDM and underwent an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT), which was repeated after approximately three years.<br /><br />They found that 210 (82 percent) participants were not exposed to GDM (called the NGDM group), and 45 (18 percent) were exposed to GDM (the EGDM group).<br /><br />"Exposure to GDM was the most significant predictor of developing impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) or type 2 diabetes, with an increased risk of almost six times for those children exposed to GDM in the womb," Caprio maintained.<br /><br />The ever growing number of women with gestational diabetes (18 percent) suggests that the future will be filled with children with early diabetes at a rate that far exceeds the current prevalence, authors concluded.<br />The study appeared in the journal Diabetologia.</p>
<p>New research shows that children exposed to gestational diabetes in the wombs are nearly six times more likely to develop diabetes or prediabetes than children who are not exposed.<br /><br /></p>.<p>With the increase in gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), there is a growing need to understand the effects of glucose exposure on the newborn in the womb, at birth and later in life, it adds.<br /><br />"Obese normal glucose-tolerant children of GDM mothers have pre-existing defects in beta cell function," said Dr Sonia Caprio from Yale University's school of medicine in New Haven.<br /><br />This is, in turn, a strong risk factor for these children to develop prediabetes or diabetes, Dr Caprio added.<br />For the study, researchers selected 255 obese adolescents with a normal glucose tolerance and were investigated for in utero exposure to GDM and underwent an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT), which was repeated after approximately three years.<br /><br />They found that 210 (82 percent) participants were not exposed to GDM (called the NGDM group), and 45 (18 percent) were exposed to GDM (the EGDM group).<br /><br />"Exposure to GDM was the most significant predictor of developing impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) or type 2 diabetes, with an increased risk of almost six times for those children exposed to GDM in the womb," Caprio maintained.<br /><br />The ever growing number of women with gestational diabetes (18 percent) suggests that the future will be filled with children with early diabetes at a rate that far exceeds the current prevalence, authors concluded.<br />The study appeared in the journal Diabetologia.</p>