In 1981, the intensified insulin therapy for achievement of euglycaemia in pregnant diabetics was introduced at the University Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology in Cologne. This study compares the results of 112 pregnancies in women with overt diabetes monitored before (1971-1980) or after (1981-1988) changing the therapeutic regimen. In the period from 1981 to 1988, the proportion of euglycaemic patients (preconceptionally 19%, before delivery 79%) was clearly higher than from 1971 to 1980 (n = 42; 7% and 9%, respectively). The tight blood glucose control resulted in a doubling of hypoglycaemic episodes during pregnancy. The proportion of preterm deliveries was reduced from 47% to 24%. The rate of caesarean sections was nearly constant (1971-1980: 38%, 1981-1988: 34%). The marked success of therapy was the decrease of perinatal mortality from 20.9% to 2.9%. The perinatal morbidity also diminished, as shown by the decreasing rates (30-90%) of foetopathy, macrosomy, respiratory distress syndrome, birth trauma, hypoglycaemia, hypocalcaemia and polycythaemia. The malformation rate, however, remained high (1971-1980 = 7%, 1981-1988 = 11%). The results demonstrate the necessity of a strict blood glucose control during pregnancy, beginning before the time of conception.
Between 59 and 81 % of the urban and rural districts implemented cross-system quality circles. The training of the moderator tandems proceeded without complications. Because of the dropout quota of the trained moderator tandems, systematic and continual training of new tandems proves to be necessary.
In contrast to maternal blood glucose, amniotic fluid insulin (AFI) directly reflects the functional state of the fetal pancreas. In a prospective study we evaluated the correlation of AFI with maternal metabolic control in 70 amniotic fluid specimens from 61 women having carbohydrate intolerance during pregnancy (White A n = 44, B0 n = 17). AFI was measured with the Insulin RIA 100 kit from Pharmacia (Freiburg). The normal range of AFI was established in 304 healthy pregnant women (16th-42nd gestational week). AFI concentrations increased by a factor of 1.5 to 2 during gestation reflecting the maturation of the fetal pancreas. Elevated AFI levels (> 97th centile) were found in 11% of normoglycemic diabetics and in 50% of women with insufficient metabolic control. Despite a high overall concordance (81%) no direct relationship could be found between fetal and maternal parameters. Patients with increased AFI values had a 5-fold higher rate of large-for-gestational age (LGA) infants than women with normal levels. This finding confirms the pathogenetic role of hyperinsulinism in the development of fetal macrosomia.
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