PHYSIOLOGICAL REDUCTION IN FASTING PLASMA-GLUCOSE CONCENTRATION IN THE FIRST-TRIMESTER OF NORMAL-PREGNANCY - THE DIABETES IN EARLY-PREGNANCY STUDY

Citation
Jl. Mills et al., PHYSIOLOGICAL REDUCTION IN FASTING PLASMA-GLUCOSE CONCENTRATION IN THE FIRST-TRIMESTER OF NORMAL-PREGNANCY - THE DIABETES IN EARLY-PREGNANCY STUDY, Metabolism, clinical and experimental, 47(9), 1998, pp. 1140-1144
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Endocrynology & Metabolism
ISSN journal
00260495
Volume
47
Issue
9
Year of publication
1998
Pages
1140 - 1144
Database
ISI
SICI code
0026-0495(1998)47:9<1140:PRIFPC>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
Previous studies indicate that fasting plasma glucose decreases during gestation, but the timing and extent are not consistent from study to study. We had an opportunity to examine this question in the normal p regnancy cohort of women studied in the Diabetes in Early Pregnancy St udy. Subjects were monitored to identify pregnancy by human chorionic gonadotropin testing, enrolled within 21 days of conception, and scree ned to rule out gestational diabetes at the juncture of the second and third trimesters. All subjects were instructed to fast overnight for 10 to 12 hours. Three hundred sixty-one women were studied between 6 a nd 12 weeks of gestation. A median decrease in plasma glucose of 2 mg/ dL was observed between weeks 6 and 10 (P = .007). In a smaller group of subjects evaluated through the third trimester, little further gluc ose reduction was observed. A reduction in glycosylated hemoglobin lev els between 10 and 20 weeks (P = .002) followed the earlier reduction in first trimester glucose levels. Analysis by body mass index (BMI) s howed a smaller first trimester reduction with increasing BMI, and non e among severely obese women (BMI > 29.9 kg/m(2)). The decline in fast ing plasma glucose in pregnancy begins early in the first trimester, w ell before fetal glucose requirements can contribute to the decline in the glucose level. Thereafter, plasma glucose levels decrease little. These results suggest that in the setting in which this study was per formed (an overnight fast) maternal physiologic adjustments account fo r a reduction in plasma glucose early in the first trimester of pregna ncy, and possibly even later in gestation as well. This is a US govern ment work. There are no restrictions on its use.