pubmed-article:3313652 | pubmed:abstractText | This study concerns a series of 34 pregnant diabetic patients, insulin-dependent or requiring insulin, which were followed between January 1st 1980 and May 31st 1986. The blood level of glycolated hemoglobin (HbA1C) decreased constantly, demonstrating the improvement of the balance of the blood sugar, but its level, at the end of the pregnancy, could not be correlated with the presence of a macrosomia (27%) and/or of a neonatal hypoglycemia (24%). On the contrary, the infraclinical hypertrophy of the ventricular septum (HVS) diagnosed systematically by sonogram, and discovered in 6 newborns (nb) could represent a good marker of the harmful role of maternal hyperglycemia, even if moderate. Arterial hypertension, found in 8 cases, has a prognostic value as it is responsible for acute fetal distress (AFD), 2 cases, and for delivery by caesarean section (8 cases). A multidiscipline approach seems to improve the prognosis of pregnancy in diabetic patients, which nevertheless, should still be considered as a high-risk pregnancy. | lld:pubmed |