Sunday, February 8, 2026
ADVT 
Health

More kids at risk of developing diabetes from womb, says study

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Aug, 2014 07:57 AM
    New research shows that children exposed to gestational diabetes in the wombs are nearly six times more likely to develop diabetes or prediabetes than children who are not exposed.
     
    With the increase in gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), there is a growing need to understand the effects of glucose exposure on the newborn in the womb, at birth and later in life, it adds.
     
    "Obese normal glucose-tolerant children of GDM mothers have pre-existing defects in beta cell function," said Dr Sonia Caprio from Yale University's school of medicine in New Haven.
     
    This is, in turn, a strong risk factor for these children to develop prediabetes or diabetes, Dr Caprio added.
     
    For the study, researchers selected 255 obese adolescents with a normal glucose tolerance and were investigated for in utero exposure to GDM and underwent an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT), which was repeated after approximately three years.
     
    They found that 210 (82 percent) participants were not exposed to GDM (called the NGDM group), and 45 (18 percent) were exposed to GDM (the EGDM group).
     
    "Exposure to GDM was the most significant predictor of developing impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) or type 2 diabetes, with an increased risk of almost six times for those children exposed to GDM in the womb," Caprio maintained.
     
    The ever growing number of women with gestational diabetes (18 percent) suggests that the future will be filled with children with early diabetes at a rate that far exceeds the current prevalence, authors concluded.
     
    The study appeared in the journal Diabetologia.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Fatty food may lead to loss of smell

    Fatty food may lead to loss of smell
    Stuffing yourself regularly with pizza or hamburger or any other high-fat food can put you at the risk of losing sense of smell, research warns....

    Fatty food may lead to loss of smell

    Functional human platelets generated in lab

    Functional human platelets generated in lab
    The US scientists have developed a next-generation platelet bioreactor to generate fully functional human platelets in the lab...

    Functional human platelets generated in lab

    'Revolutionary' antibiotics to tackle TB

    'Revolutionary' antibiotics to tackle TB
    Why mycobacteria - a family that includes the microbe that causes tuberculosis (TB) - survive oxygen limitation has long been a mystery but not any more....

    'Revolutionary' antibiotics to tackle TB

    'Simulated' human heart created for better drug testing

    'Simulated' human heart created for better drug testing
    In pioneering research, a scientist has developed a 'simulated' human heart to test the effect of drugs on the heart without using human or animal trials....

    'Simulated' human heart created for better drug testing

    Avian influenza treatments identified

    Avian influenza treatments identified
    In a novel discovery, scientists have identified six potential therapeutics to treat the deadly H7N9 avian influenza...

    Avian influenza treatments identified

    Genes play key role in twins' language deficit

    Genes play key role in twins' language deficit
    Contrary to the popular tendency to attribute delays in early language acquisition of twins to mothers, researchers have found that genes play a significant role in...

    Genes play key role in twins' language deficit