Background: Gestational diabetes mellitus is glucose
intolerance of varying degrees with onset or first detection during pregnancy,
it can cause long and short-term morbidities in both the mother and the child,
such as shoulder dystocia, preeclampsia, and high blood pressure. The most
powerful endogenous vasoconstrictor peptide, urotensin II, and its receptor are
involved in the etiology of gestational diabetes mellitus. The considerable
decline in insulin sensitivity that occurs late in pregnancy reveals the lower
insulin sensitivity that occurs before pregnancy.
Aim: The aim of the study is to see if there is a link
between Urotensin II levels and insulin resistance in pregnant women with
gestational diabetes.
Method: This is a case-control study, conducted in the
obstetrics and gynecology department at Baghdad Teaching Hospital from the
first of January 2019 to the end of December 2019. A sample of 80 pregnant
women participated in the study fulfilling inclusion criteria. 40 of them were
diagnosed with gestational diabetes mellitus by (2 hours 75 gm. Oral glucose
tolerance test) and 40 women as a control group. The analysis was done by using
the Statistical Package for Social Science (SPSS) program, version 23 for
qualitative variables.
Results: The mean age of the gestational diabetes mellitus
group was 29.8±6.9 years and control was 29.7±6.6 years with no significant
differences. The study showed a highly significant increase in Insulin, fasting
blood glucose, and Homeostatic Model Assessment for Insulin Resistance
(HOMA-IR), of the GDM group than that in the group without disease. A
significant difference was found regarding high - sensitivity C-reactive protein hs-CRP
(p=0.004). The level of Urotensin II in subjects with gestational diabetes was
(109±33.22) highly was higher than that in healthy subjects (78±22.6). There is
a positive correlation between circulating Urotensin II levels with fasting
insulin and HOMA-IR. While a negative correlation was found with fasting blood
glucose.
Conclusion: The level of UII was found to be raised in gestational diabetes pregnant women. We also discovered that circulating levels of UII were greater in women with GDM than in controls. Insulin resistance was observed to be greater in pregnant women with GDM in comparison with controls.
Author(s) Details:
Najmah M. Meran,
Obstetrics and Gynecology Department, College of Medicine,
University of Baghdad, Baghdad, Iraq.
Farah Abdul Salam
Hussein,
Obstetrics
and Gynecology Department, Baghdad Teaching Hospital, Baghdad, Iraq.
Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/ANUMS-V2/article/view/13088
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