Perinatal significance of diagnosing glucose intolerance during pregnancy with portable glucose meter
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P. Jakobi
Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the effect on perinatal outcome of replacing glucose measurements for the diagnosis of gestational diabetes mellitus in central laboratories with those obtained by portable glucose meter.
Study design: Simultaneously, venous blood samples were taken at the 100-g glucose tolerance test, and finger capillary blood glucose levels were also measured with a portable glucose meter in 180 pregnant patients. Patient management was according to the venous plasma glucose results. Following deliveries, the women were reallocated to diagnostic groups by both methods of measurements and by using the same cutoff values, and the outcome data were compared.
Results: By using glucose values obtained by portable glucose meters instead of the results attained in the central laboratory, more women were diagnosed with gestational diabetes (33 vs 25) and the perinatal outcome was comparable.
Conclusions: Obstetricians have to identify glucose intolerance during pregnancy in order to prevent macrosomia and its perinatal complications. These goals can be achieved with at least the same efficacy by performing the 100-g glucose tolerance test with a portable glucose meter as with current laboratory methods. Such an approach is time and resource saving and more convenient for both patients and health providers.
Copyright © 2003 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG
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Articles in the same Issue
- Mode of conception, placental morphology and perinatal outcome of twin gestations
- The effects of birth weight discordance and prematurity on twin neonatal outcome
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- Biovar diversity of Ureaplasma urealyticum in amniotic fluid: distribution, intrauterine inflammatory response and pregnancy outcomes
- Comparative study on the expression of cytokine – receptor genes in normal and preeclamptic human placentas using DNA microarrays
- Chorioangioma – new insights into a well-known problem I. Results of a clinical and morphological study of 136 cases
- Chorioangiomas – new insights into a well-known problem II. An immuno-histochemical investigation of 136 cases
- Impaired CD14-dependent and independent response of polymorphonuclear leukocytes in preterm infants
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