Abstract

To evaluate vascular endothelial function in isolated small arteries from women with gestational diabetes. Small subcutaneous arteries (mean luminal diameter approximately 250 microns) were dissected from biopsies obtained at caesarean section in 14 normotensive women with gestational diabetes and in 18 normotensive nondiabetic pregnant women. Vascular function was determined after mounting the arteries on a small vessel myograph. Pre-constricted arteries from gestational diabetic pregnant women demonstrated poor relaxation to acetylcholine, an endothelium-dependent vasodilator (pEC50, mean [SE], 6.98 [0.10] vs normal pregnant, 7.28 [0.08], P < 0.03; % maximum relaxation, median [range], 88.2 [42.4-99.4] vs normal pregnant 94.2 [71.8-100.0], P < 0.01). In the presence of indomethacin relaxation to acetylcholine was similar in both groups suggesting a deficiency in dilator prostaglandin synthesis in the arteries from the diabetic women. The nitric oxide synthase inhibitor NG-monomethyl-L-arginine further reduced sensitivity of arteries to acetylcholine but to a similar degree in both normal pregnant and gestational diabetic women. Relaxation to sodium nitroprusside, an indicator of sensitivity of the vascular smooth muscle to nitric oxide, was similar in both groups. Maternal vascular endothelial dysfunction may contribute to the increased incidence of cardiovascular disorders in women with gestational diabetes.

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