Maternal vascular dysfunction in gestational diabetes is associated with birth of small neonates

IF 6.1 3区 医学 Q1 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM Diabetes research and clinical practice Pub Date : 2025-02-01 DOI:10.1016/j.diabres.2025.112032
Christos Chatzakis , Sarah Lausegger , Erika Sembrera , Sofia Vargas , Kypros H Nicolaides , Marietta Charakida
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Abstract

Aims

The study aimed to evaluate maternal hemodynamic and vascular changes in women with small-for-gestational age(SGA) and large-for-gestational age(LGA) fetuses in the presence and absence of gestational diabetes mellitus(GDM).

Materials

Women at 35+0 to 36+6 weeks’ gestation with and without GDM were included. Maternal demographics, ultrasound for fetal growth, Doppler studies of uterine and ophthalmic arteries, carotid–femoral pulse-wave velocity(PWV), augmentation index, cardiac output, and total peripheral resistance(TPR) were recorded. Multinomial logistic regression was used.

Results

Of 11,132 women, 1,228(11.0%) developed GDM. In GDM pregnancies, 158(12.8%) delivered SGA and 136(11.1%) delivered LGA neonates, while non-GDM pregnancies had 1,051(10.6%) SGA and 806(8.1%) LGA neonates. In GDM and non-GDM women, SGA groups had the highest uterine artery pulsatility index(PI) percentiles, PWV and ophthalmic artery peak systolic velocity ratio. PWV was higher in the GDM SGA group compared to non-GDM SGA group. Cardiac output was lower in SGA groups when compared to the AGA group. In women with GDM, TPR, ophthalmic artery PSV ratio and uterine artery PI percentile had a positive association with the development of SGA.

Conclusions

Women with GDM and vascular dysfunction have higher risk to deliver SGA neonates. Maternal hemodynamic and vascular maladaptation could potentially explain the development of SGA in women with GDM.
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来源期刊
Diabetes research and clinical practice
Diabetes research and clinical practice 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
10.30
自引率
3.90%
发文量
862
审稿时长
32 days
期刊介绍: Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice is an international journal for health-care providers and clinically oriented researchers that publishes high-quality original research articles and expert reviews in diabetes and related areas. The role of the journal is to provide a venue for dissemination of knowledge and discussion of topics related to diabetes clinical research and patient care. Topics of focus include translational science, genetics, immunology, nutrition, psychosocial research, epidemiology, prevention, socio-economic research, complications, new treatments, technologies and therapy.
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