Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
Health

'Diabetic mother may beget obese daughters'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Oct, 2014 07:02 AM
    Women who developed gestational diabetes and were overweight before pregnancy were at a higher risk of begetting daughters who became obese later in childhood, said a research.
     
    This is the first study of this kind directly linking maternal hyperglycemia (high blood glucose) to overweight offspring.
     
    "Glucose levels during pregnancy, particularly gestational diabetes, were associated with the girls being overweight, and this association was much stronger if the mother was also overweight before pregnancy," said Ai Kubo, epidemiologist at the Kaiser Permanente Division of Research in Oakland, California in the uS.
     
    The study is based on long-term research that included a multi-ethnic cohort of 421 girls and their mothers.
     
    The girls were followed from 2005 to 2011, with annual clinic visits to measure each girl's height, weight, body fat, abdominal obesity, and other parameters, pointed out the study.
     
    Pregnant women in the Kaiser Permanente system were asked to take glucose tolerance tests during gestational weeks 24 to 28.
     
    Twenty-seven mothers in the study had gestational diabetes, found the study.
     
    If a girl's mother had gestational diabetes, the former's risk of having a body mass index at or above the 85th percentile was 3.5 times higher than that of girls whose mothers did not have gestational diabetes, said the authors.
     
    In case her mother was also overweight and had gestational diabetes, the risk of being overweight was about 5.5 times higher, found the research.
     
    Behaviour modifications in women to reduce weight gain and improve lifestyle before and during pregnancy may also help reduce the risk of obesity in their offspring, concluded Kubo.
     
    The study appeared in the journal Diabetes Care.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    UN Document Admits WHO Badly Fumbled Response To Ebola

    UN Document Admits WHO Badly Fumbled Response To Ebola
    In a draft document, the World Health Organization has acknowledged that it botched attempts to stop the now-spiraling Ebola outbreak in West Africa, blaming factors including incompetent staff and a lack of information.

    UN Document Admits WHO Badly Fumbled Response To Ebola

    A new drug to soon better treat heart attack

    A new drug to soon better treat heart attack
    Some scar-forming cells in the heart have the ability to become cells that form blood vessels required to boosts the heart's ability to heal after an injury...

    A new drug to soon better treat heart attack

    Females sex hormone key to warding off lung infections

    Females sex hormone key to warding off lung infections
    Females have been known to be naturally more resistant to respiratory infections than males. Now, scientists have shown that the increased resistance to....

    Females sex hormone key to warding off lung infections

    Parkinson's disease progression may be reversed

    Parkinson's disease progression may be reversed
    The substances called deacetylase inhibitors could fully restore movement problems observed in fruit flies carrying the LRRK2 mutation....

    Parkinson's disease progression may be reversed

    Brain surgery through cheek bone for epilepsy patients

    Brain surgery through cheek bone for epilepsy patients
    Researchers have developed a robotic device for people suffering from epilepsy that would enter through the cheek bone, thereby avoiding having to drill ...

    Brain surgery through cheek bone for epilepsy patients

    University of Minnesota officials knock down tweet saying Ebola is airborne

    University of Minnesota officials knock down tweet saying Ebola is airborne
    University spokeswoman Caroline Marin told the Star Tribune in Minneapolis that the university never made such a claim.

    University of Minnesota officials knock down tweet saying Ebola is airborne