This document was developed by a consensus conference initiated by Kristian Thygesen, MD, and Joseph S. Alpert, MD, after formal approval by Lars Rydén, MD, President of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC), and Arthur Garson, MD, President of the American College of Cardiology (ACC). All of the participants were selected for their expertise in the field they represented, with approximately one-half of the participants selected from each organization. Participants were instructed to review the scientific evidence in their area of expertise and to attend the consensus conference with prepared remarks. The first draft of the document was prepared during the consensus conference itself. Sources of funding appear in Appendix A. The recommendations made in this document represent the attitudes and opinions of the participants at the time of the conference, and these recommendations were revised subsequently. The conclusions reached will undoubtedly need to be revised as new scientific evidence becomes available. This document has been reviewed by members of the ESC Committee for Scientific and Clinical Initiatives and by members of the Board of the ESC who approved the document on April 15, 2000.*
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.
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