Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
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In normal pregnancy lecithin/sphingomyelin ratios correlate with gestational age. In complicated pregnancies biochemical maturation of fetal lung may be accelerated or delayed, depending upon maternal, fetal, or placental conditions. Surfactant contains other phospholipids besides lecithin, including phosphatidylglycerol (PG), the second major component of mature surfactant. Ninety phospholipid patterns in amniotic fluid were studied by two-dimensional thin-layer chromatography. In uncomplicated pregnancies PG was absent until 37 weeks' gestation, then increased there after. In complicated pregnancies (pre-eclampsia, diabetes Classes D, F, and R, premature rupture of membranes) PG was identified before 35 (as early as 29 weeks' gestation. These results verify accelerated lung maturation in certain complicated pregnancies. No newborn infant developed respiratory distress syndrome in the presence of PG.
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PMID:Significance of phosphatidylglycerol in amniotic fluid in complicated pregnancies. 10 3

The most important advancement in perinatology during the past few years has been the possibility to selectively establish a criterion to judge high risk pregnancies, which still represent the great majority of cases of materno-infant morbimortality. Social, economic, and cultural factors, age, biological antecedents of the mother, previous pregnancies, and medical history, have all a great influence in the evaluation of gestation. Through the years several models have been constructed to evaluate high perinatal risks; excluding complications due to danger of congenital abnormalities only 19% of women are exposed to high risk pregnancy. Among prenatal risk factors the most common are toxemia, chronic hypertension, severe cardiopathy, and diabetes; risk factors that may become more evident during delivery or shortly before it are toxemia again, premature rupture of membranes, meconial amniotic fluid, and abnormal presentation.
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PMID:[Perinatal medicine. Medico-social implications. I. Technics used in the identification of high risk pregnancy]. 45 11

Serum prolactin values in normal pregnant women showed a progressive increase from a mean value of 50 ng/ml in the 12th week to 270 ng/ml at term, with the range at term being 100-600 ng/ml. There was a fairly good correlation (r = 0.7) between the values of 24-hour urine estriol in 138 determinations and in the serum prolactin in 133 pregnant women. The regression lines of serum hPRL values with time of gestation in cases of intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) and diabetes mellitus were less steep than those seen in normal pregnancy. The serum hPRL value of patients with preeclamptic toxemia, latent diabetes, premature rupture of membranes, or multiple pregnancies were found not to differ significantly from the values observed in normal pregnancy. The results indicate that prolactin determinations in pathologic pregnancies are not useful as an aid in their evaluation.
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PMID:Serum prolactin in normal and pathologic pregnancy. 90 61

A three-county program in southern West Virginia was developed by an obstetric practice to deliver prenatal care to a population of uninsured patients. Between January 1984 and December 1986, 1331 (29.4%) of 4534 patients were delivered at a level 2 hospital after prenatal care within the clinic program. The hospital-wide fetal death ratio declined from 11.8 to 7.2 per 1000 live births during the years of clinic operation, a statistically significant reduction (P = .02). Uninsured patients experienced a statistically significant reduction in fetal death ratio during the program, from 35.4 to 7.0 per 1000 live births (P = .02), whereas those covered by medical assistance did not experience a reduction. Privately insured patients also had a significant decrease, from 10.0 to 3.1 per 1000 live births (P less than .001). The increasing operating expense, mainly due to rising malpractice insurance premiums, required suspension of the program in December 1986. The fetal death ratio returned to 10.3 deaths per 1000 live births in 1987. Factors that varied significantly during the "clinic" phase included: higher rates of cesarean, diagnosed maternal hypertension, and diabetes mellitus; and lower rates of premature rupture of membranes and non-white population. Other factors, including age over 35 years, postdatism, incidence of twins, incidence of lethal congenital anomalies, and single marital status, did not vary significantly before, during, or after the clinic program. This study identified a high-risk population of patients who did not qualify for medical assistance coverage and were de facto "uninsured." The results suggest that prenatal care for this high-risk population of uninsured patients can reduce the fetal death rate.
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PMID:The impact of prenatal care on fetal and neonatal death rates for uninsured patients: a "natural experiment" in West Virginia. 172 83

Diabetes in pregnant Mexican-American women is a serious and expensive health problem. At the University of California, San Diego Medical Center, 44% of pregnant women are Mexican American. In the Diabetes in Pregnancy Clinic, only 7% of women with insulin-dependent diabetes are in this ethnic group compared with 66% of non-insulin-dependent diabetic patients and 51% of those with gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). GDM is the most common complication of pregnancy in Mexican Americans with a prevalence approximately three times higher than that of whites (4.5 vs. 1.5%). Mexican-American obese GDM subjects had more frequent cesarean sections and were more likely to have complications of premature rupture of membranes and preterm labor (NS). Polycythemia and sepsis also occurred more often in their infants. Anthropometric measurements in infants of both lean and obese GDM subjects differed from those of infants of mothers without GDM. Infants of lean mothers with GDM were heavier and longer than those of lean mothers without GDM. In addition, they had increased waist-hip ratio and triceps and subscapular skin folds. Infants of obese mothers with GDM were heavier than those of lean mothers with GDM. Moreover, they were longer (P less than 0.04); had a higher body mass index (P less than 0.04); and larger waist and hip circumferences (P less than 0.03) and buccal (P less than 0.01), subscapular (P less than 0.01), and sum of skin-fold measurements (P less than 0.03). Our observations indicate that pregnant diabetic Mexican-American women have predominantly GDM and non-insulin-dependent diabetes. They represent a major public health problem because of increased maternal and neonatal morbidity.
Diabetes Care 1991 Jul
PMID:Diabetes in pregnancy in Mexican Americans. 191 21

Ninety pregnancies conceived by infertile couples using assisted reproductive technologies and 86 pregnancies conceived by infertile couples with routine infertility treatment were analyzed to determine the outcome of and the complications experienced during the pregnancies. Pregnancies ending after 24 weeks' gestation were evaluated for the following complications: pregnancy-induced hypertension, diabetes mellitus, preterm labor, premature rupture of membranes, placenta previa, and fetal growth retardation. A matched control group of normal fertile patients admitted to the obstetric service at Vanderbilt University Medical Center was used to compare the incidence of pregnancy complications among the groups. In the group treated by assisted reproduction, 81 pregnancies were singleton and nine were multiple gestations, whereas in the routine group, 84 were singleton and two were multiple gestations. In the group treated by assisted reproduction, 29 of 90 gestations (32%) ended before 24 weeks, compared with 18 of 86 (21%) in the routine group, a nonsignificant difference. Mean birth weight and gestational age were similar among the three groups for singleton gestations. Among multiple gestations, the mean (+/- standard error of the mean [SEM]) birth weights were 2513 +/- 115, 724 +/- 57, and 2282 +/- 132 g in the group treated by assisted reproduction, the group receiving routine methods, and the control group, respectively (P less than .001 when those treated by routine methods were compared with the other two groups). The mean (+/- SEM) gestational ages were 36 +/- 1.2, 26.5 +/- 2.0, and 35.5 +/- 1.2 weeks, respectively (P less than .01 comparing those treated by routine methods and the other two groups).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Complications of pregnancy in infertile couples: routine treatment versus assisted reproduction. 218 7

375 german departments of obstetrics with a total of 258,348 deliveries answered a questionnaire on the actual standards in obstetrical management for the prevention of neonatal respiratory distress syndrome. On the basis of these extensive data, results could be obtained about the time and the regimen of therapy as well as antenatal diagnostics of lung maturity. Furthermore the results document the treatment of high risk pregnancies like multiple pregnancies, diabetes mellitus, gestosis and PROM.
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PMID:[The status of drug prevention of respiratory distress syndrome in German gynecologic clinics]. 273 29

The results are presented of fluorescence polarization as a method for measurement of surfactant production in 159 specimens of amniotic fluid collected from pregnant women with diabetes, hypertension, Rh immunization, premature rupture of membranes (for more than 48 h prior to delivery) and intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR). The predictability of the development of respiratory distress syndrome has been assessed by this assay. Its specificity, sensitivity and overall accuracy were similar to the lecithin/sphingomyelin (L/S) ratio. The influence of the conditions detailed on fetal lung maturation was determined, lung development being enhanced until near term by Rh immunization, rupture of membranes and hypertension with IUGR.
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PMID:Measurement of fetal surfactant production by fluorescence polarization of amniotic fluid in complicated pregnancies. 311 58

Main indications for antenatal administration glucocorticoid to pregnant women are premature contractions, hemorrhage during pregnancy, conditions of fetal distress and maternal diseases. There are some absolute or relative contraindications as well: severe forms of preeclampsia, diabetes mellitus, premature rupture of membranes, maternal and/intrauterine infections. In a retrospective evaluation of the data obtained at our institution of 637 nonrandomized cases from the years 1980-1985, we could demonstrate the dependence of the therapeutic results on the sex of the newborn. The RDS incidence is significantly different after betamethasone prophylaxis. It was 1/25 (4%) in girls compared to 13/31 (42%) in boys. A marked reduction of the RDS incidence is only detectable after betamethasone therapy from the 32nd to the 34th week of gestation. Thus we recommend RDS prophylaxis for all patients with premature contraction, mainly between the 32nd and 34th week of pregnancy. In addition, it should be given in cases of confirmed lung immaturity. Special restrictions are necessary in cases of preeclampsia, eclampsia, diabetes and confirmed maternal infections. In the group of diabetes or preeclampsia patients an RDS prophylaxis should only be given, if at all, when it can be performed under intensive care conditions.
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PMID:Clinical aspects of antenatal glucocorticoid treatment for prevention of neonatal respiratory distress syndrome. 344 99

To measure changes in bone alkaline phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.1) activity in serum as a function of duration of pregnancy, we adapted our existing alkaline phosphatase (ALP) isoenzyme assay (which has been used to measure bone, hepatic, and intestinal ALP activities in serum, in the absence of placental ALP) to allow quantification of individual ALP isoenzyme activities in the presence of placental ALP. The resulting CV for repeat measurements of bone ALP activity in artificial isoenzyme mixtures ranged from 23% for samples in which the bone isoenzyme represented 7% of total ALP activity to 11% for samples in which bone ALP accounted for 48% of total ALP activity. Values for repeat determinations of bone ALP activity in human serum samples (i.e., including samples obtained from pregnant women and from nonpregnant controls) varied by an average of 18%. We find, in initial applications of this method, that (a) the amount of bone ALP activity in serum is increased during pregnancy (P less than .001), and remains increased at six weeks postpartum, in non-lactating women (P less than .001), and (b) bone ALP activity at term was not significantly different in pregnant women with pre-eclampsia, diabetes, premature rupture of membranes, or premature labor, compared with normal pregnancies at term. Our data support the hypothesis that maternal bone formation may be increased during pregnancy.
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PMID:Time-dependent changes in bone, placental, intestinal, and hepatic alkaline phosphatase activities in serum during human pregnancy. 366 32


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