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Determinants of incident hyperglycemia 6 years after delivery in young rural Indian mothers: the Pune Maternal Nutrition Study (PMNS)

Determinants of incident hyperglycemia 6 years after delivery in young rural Indian mothers: the Pune Maternal Nutrition Study (PMNS)
Determinants of incident hyperglycemia 6 years after delivery in young rural Indian mothers: the Pune Maternal Nutrition Study (PMNS)
OBJECTIVE: To study determinants of incident hyperglycemia in rural Indian mothers 6 years after delivery. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: The Pune Maternal Nutrition Study collected information in six villages near Pune on prepregnant characteristics and nutrition, physical activity, and glucose tolerance during pregnancy. An oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) was repeated 6 years after delivery. RESULTS: A total of 597 mothers had an OGTT at 28 weeks' gestation; 3 had gestational diabetes (by World Health Organization 1999 criteria). Six years later, 42 of 509 originally normal glucose-tolerant mothers were hyperglycemic (8 diabetic, 20 with impaired glucose tolerance, and 14 with impaired fasting glucose). The hyperglycemic women had shorter legs and thicker skinfolds before pregnancy (P < 0.01, both), were less active and more hyperglycemic (2-h plasma glucose 4.8 vs. 4.4 mmol/l, P < 0.001) during pregnancy, and gained more weight during follow-up (6.0 vs. 2.7 kg, P < 0.001). Multivariate analysis revealed that total leukocyte count and blood pressure during pregnancy were additional independent predictors of 2-h glucose concentration at follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that compromised linear growth, adiposity, inflammation, and less physical activity predispose to hyperglycemia in young rural Indian women. International cut points of diabetes risk factors are largely irrelevant in these women
risk factors, glucose, weight, mothers, cardiovascular disease, maternal, blood pressure, risk, nutrition, pregnancy, growth, fasting, maternal nutrition, methods, research design, world health, glucose tolerance test, inflammation, glucose tolerance, plasma, women, research, analysis, india, leg, activity, health, blood, diabetes
1935-5548
2542-2547
Kulkarni, S.R.
1aa36e94-aa32-4b2e-9753-0b3b99cda316
Fall, C.H.
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18
Joshi, N.V.
9e2d91cd-ba93-4eae-9a17-921f8f773280
Lubree, H.G.
feeeecc7-471f-4e4e-8431-aabde4888f2e
Deshpande, V.U.
7b72071d-7f7f-4cbc-891d-bc37759250fb
Pasarkar, R.V.
1dcc8636-277d-4ae8-9232-2b04e5681857
Bhat, D.S.
75412cda-4b68-4286-82e2-8f9ea39fd842
Naik, S.S.
f721dff5-7dc8-4ebf-a1fe-c9dd2642be5d
Yajnik, C.S.
ea0648f2-b384-4e5c-9e0f-45cc852e0c75
Kulkarni, S.R.
1aa36e94-aa32-4b2e-9753-0b3b99cda316
Fall, C.H.
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18
Joshi, N.V.
9e2d91cd-ba93-4eae-9a17-921f8f773280
Lubree, H.G.
feeeecc7-471f-4e4e-8431-aabde4888f2e
Deshpande, V.U.
7b72071d-7f7f-4cbc-891d-bc37759250fb
Pasarkar, R.V.
1dcc8636-277d-4ae8-9232-2b04e5681857
Bhat, D.S.
75412cda-4b68-4286-82e2-8f9ea39fd842
Naik, S.S.
f721dff5-7dc8-4ebf-a1fe-c9dd2642be5d
Yajnik, C.S.
ea0648f2-b384-4e5c-9e0f-45cc852e0c75

Kulkarni, S.R., Fall, C.H., Joshi, N.V., Lubree, H.G., Deshpande, V.U., Pasarkar, R.V., Bhat, D.S., Naik, S.S. and Yajnik, C.S. (2007) Determinants of incident hyperglycemia 6 years after delivery in young rural Indian mothers: the Pune Maternal Nutrition Study (PMNS). Diabetes Care, 30 (10), 2542-2547. (doi:10.2337/dc07-0329).

Record type: Article

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To study determinants of incident hyperglycemia in rural Indian mothers 6 years after delivery. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: The Pune Maternal Nutrition Study collected information in six villages near Pune on prepregnant characteristics and nutrition, physical activity, and glucose tolerance during pregnancy. An oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) was repeated 6 years after delivery. RESULTS: A total of 597 mothers had an OGTT at 28 weeks' gestation; 3 had gestational diabetes (by World Health Organization 1999 criteria). Six years later, 42 of 509 originally normal glucose-tolerant mothers were hyperglycemic (8 diabetic, 20 with impaired glucose tolerance, and 14 with impaired fasting glucose). The hyperglycemic women had shorter legs and thicker skinfolds before pregnancy (P < 0.01, both), were less active and more hyperglycemic (2-h plasma glucose 4.8 vs. 4.4 mmol/l, P < 0.001) during pregnancy, and gained more weight during follow-up (6.0 vs. 2.7 kg, P < 0.001). Multivariate analysis revealed that total leukocyte count and blood pressure during pregnancy were additional independent predictors of 2-h glucose concentration at follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that compromised linear growth, adiposity, inflammation, and less physical activity predispose to hyperglycemia in young rural Indian women. International cut points of diabetes risk factors are largely irrelevant in these women

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More information

Published date: 2007
Keywords: risk factors, glucose, weight, mothers, cardiovascular disease, maternal, blood pressure, risk, nutrition, pregnancy, growth, fasting, maternal nutrition, methods, research design, world health, glucose tolerance test, inflammation, glucose tolerance, plasma, women, research, analysis, india, leg, activity, health, blood, diabetes

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 61305
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/61305
ISSN: 1935-5548
PURE UUID: f801d9f5-df6c-473c-89b1-64f9b5a72496
ORCID for C.H. Fall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4402-5552

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Date deposited: 10 Sep 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:38

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Contributors

Author: S.R. Kulkarni
Author: C.H. Fall ORCID iD
Author: N.V. Joshi
Author: H.G. Lubree
Author: V.U. Deshpande
Author: R.V. Pasarkar
Author: D.S. Bhat
Author: S.S. Naik
Author: C.S. Yajnik

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