Women who develop diabetes mellitus during pregnancy very often revert to normal carbohydrate metabolism after parturition. During this quiescent period, however, increased sensitivity to adverse metabolic stress is evident. Recurrence of impaired carbohydrate tolerance with greater frequency than in normal populations is observed following the administration of oral contraceptive agents, glucocorticoids, and certain placental hormones such as human chorionic somatomammotropin. Factors responsible for this vulnerability to adverse stress are unknown but, in part, may reside in subclinical defects in beta-cell function. Ultimately, the great majority of these individuals develop permanent disease, suggesting that diabetes initially manifested only during pregnancy is not transient but progresses to more severe forms later in life.
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Session I. Metabolic Implications of Mild Disturbances in Maternal Carbohydrate Intolerance|
May 01 1980
Relative Sensitivity of Postpartum Gestational Diabetic Women to Oral Contraceptive Agents and Other Metabolic Stress Free
Ronald K Kalkhoff
Ronald K Kalkhoff
Division of Metabolism and Endocrinology, Medical College of Wisconsin and the Milwaukee County Medical Complex
8700 W. Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
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Citation
Ronald K Kalkhoff; Relative Sensitivity of Postpartum Gestational Diabetic Women to Oral Contraceptive Agents and Other Metabolic Stress. Diabetes Care 1 May 1980; 3 (3): 421–424. https://doi.org/10.2337/diacare.3.3.421
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