Abstract

Maternal serum concentrations of relaxin, an insulin homologue produced both by the corpus luteum of pregnancy and by the fetoplacental unit, are highest in the first trimester and fall to their lowest level in the third trimester. Relaxin is thought to influence carbohydrate metabolism in the uterus, and it has been suggested that serum concentrations of relaxin in diabetic women are higher than those of non-diabetic women. We show that maternal serum relaxin concentrations are significantly higher at each stage of pregnancy in insulin-dependent diabetic mothers than in non-diabetic mothers. This elevation in relaxin concentrations is not related to other indices of diabetic control. The physiological importance of the higher concentrations of relaxin in the serum of diabetic women—in particular, whether they contribute to the higher incidence of major anomalies in the fetuses of diabetic mothers—is yet to be determined.

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