Abstract
Infants of diabetic mothers have hyperinsulinism at birth, presumably resulting from maternal hyperglycemia or some other derangement of maternal metabolism, and are extremely sensitive to insulin. Such infants have significantly greater numbers of insulin receptors on cord blood monocytes compared to normal infants. To assess the role of maternal diabetic control, nine infants of insulin-dependent diabetic mothers, who were intensively treated during pregnancy, were studied. Maternal blood glucose values were measured during weekly out-patient visits throughout pregnancy, and insulin therapy was given to maintain fasting blood glucose values below 100mg/dl. When necessary, the patients were hospitalized early in pregnancy in order to achieve glucose control, and all patients were hospitalized for up to 2 weeks before delivery for strict glucose control. The mean birth weight (+/- SD) of these infants (3.23 +/- 0.23 kg) was lower than that of nine infants of mothers with gestational diabetes not receiving insulin or intensive efforts at maintenance of normoglycemia (3.99 +/- 0.12; P less than 0.01) and was not significantly different from that of normal infants (3.51 +/- 0.37 kg). Mean cord blood C-peptide levels (+/- SD), determined by RIA, were 1.6 +/- 0.78 ng/ml for infants of these strictly controlled diabetic mothers and 1.4 0.1 ng/ml for normal infants. Scatchard analysis of [125]insulin binding to cord blood monocytes yielded mean receptor numbers for infants of diabetic mothers of 22,500 vs. 105,000 sites/cell for infants of diabetic mothers (P less than 0.001) and 26,600 sites/cell for normal infants. We conclude that the strict control of maternal diabetes during the last trimester of pregnancy prevents fetal hyperinsulinemia and is associated with the development of normal numbers of insulin receptors on the infants' monocytes.
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More From: The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
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