Childbearing makes women prone to the metabolic syndrome-abdominal obesity, high triglycerides, insulin resistance and other cardiovascular disease risk factors, shows a new study.
Childbearing makes women prone to the metabolic syndrome-abdominal obesity, high triglycerides, insulin resistance and other cardiovascular disease risk factors, shows a new study.
The risk is more than twice greater for those who have had gestational diabetes.Cora E. Lewis, a professor of Preventive Medicine at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, used data collected in the CARDIA (Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults) study to determine the correlation between a higher incidence of the metabolic syndrome among women ages 18-30 at the start of the study, who bore at least one child during the 20-year period following.
"Pregnancy can have lasting, adverse physiological effects and may result in behavioral changes. Some previous studies have shown an association between childbearing and the metabolic syndrome, and some have shown that a history of gestational diabetes is a strong predictor of Type 2 diabetes," she said.
"However, these studies lacked the preconception measurements to establish a baseline with which to measure the changes brought on by pregnancy. Many have not had control groups of women who had not had pregnancies, and thus they have rarely provided conclusive evidence linking pregnancy-related risk factor changes to disease onset. CARDIA began following participants ages 18-30 years in 1985-1986 and continues today, and we had the necessary information to track women both before and after pregnancy and to compare women with pregnancies to those without," she added.
Lewis and her colleagues have revealed that, of the 2,787 women in the CARDIA study, 1,451 were included in this study analysis. Of those, 706 had no births and 745 had at least one birth during the 20 years following. Of the 745, 88 had at least one birth complicated by gestational diabetes.
The researchers controlled for preconception measurements of body mass index (BMI), all metabolic syndrome components and physical activity.
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Among women with gestational diabetes, once baseline adjustments were made, the researchers found that they were nearly two-and-a-half times more likely to develop the metabolic syndrome than those women who had not had gestational diabetes-complicated pregnancies.
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Her team suggested that future studies might determine whether reductions in weight retention and central obesity, and reductions through treatment of cholesterol and triglycerides, after pregnancy may prevent disease later in life.
They also said that postpartum screening of cardio-metabolic risk factors, especially among women with gestational diabetes, might offer an important opportunity for disease prevention among women of reproductive and older ages.
Until then, Lewis said, the best way for everyone to prevent disease, including women of childbearing age, is to make the necessary lifestyle changes: exercise regularly and eat a healthy diet.
A research article on the study has been published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.
Source-ANI
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