GDM and preeclampsia are common complications of pregnancy, for which overweight/obesity is a common risk factor. Both conditions are associated with a two-to-four-fold increase in future incident heart failure, which may be linked to early maladaptive myocardial changes. To determine maternal myocardial structural, functional, and energetic responses to pregnancies complicated by gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) or preeclampsia compared to healthy pregnancies (HP) at third-trimester of pregnancy and twelve-months postpartum. Thirty-eight women with HP, 30 GDM, 20 preeclampsia, 10 non-pregnant controls with overweight (Overweight-NC) and 10 with normal-weight were recruited. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance spectroscopy and imaging were used to define myocardial energetics (phosphocreatine: ATP ratio [PCr/ATP]), left ventricular (LV) volumes, mass, and ejection fraction and global longitudinal shortening (GLS). Pregnancy groups underwent repeat scans twelve-months postpartum, nulliparous-controls were assessed once. During third-trimester, compared to HP, women with either GDM or preeclampsia displayed higher BMI, higher LV-mass (HP:90[85,94]g, GDM:103[96,112], Preeclampsia:118[111,125]g; P=0.001), and lower PCr/ATP (HP:2.2[2.1,2.4], GDM:1.9[1.7,2], Preeclampsia:1.9[1.8,2.1];P=0.0004) and GLS (HP:20[18,21]%, GDM:18[17,19]%, Preeclampsia:16[14,17]%;P=0.01). Post-pregnancy, no group saw significant changes in LV-mass, PCr/ATP or GLS. There were no significant differences in LV-mass, PCr/ATP or GLS between the GDM and preeclampsia groups during or post-pregnancy. Moreover, the Overweight-NC showed no significant differences in LV-mass ( 53[43,63])g, PCr/ATP (2.0[1.8,2.2]) or GLS (-19[17,21]%) compared to GDM or preeclampsia groups during or post-pregnancy. Women with GDM or preeclampsia exhibit similar myocardial phenotypes during pregnancy with persistent subclinical alterations in LV mass, energetics and GLS twelve-months postpartum. These myocardial alterations are similar to those detected in Overweight-NC, potentially suggesting the myocardial changes may predominantly be driven by overweight/obesity.
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