Summary
The offspring of mother animals with mild gestational hyperglycaemia exhibited basal
hyperinsulinism, decreased glucose tolerance and increased susceptibility to streptozotocin
diabetes. Following low-dose successive streptozotocin treatment a significantly increased
spleen cell cytotoxicity against-cells was found in these animals as compared to the
offspring of gestational normoglycaemic control mothers. Such increased cell-mediated
cytotoxicity, considered as enhanced autoimmune reactivity, was positively correlated
to blood glucose levels and negatively correlated to pancreatic insulin contents.
Thus, hyperinsulinism, occurring during pre- and neonatal brain organization and produced
by gestational hyperglycaemia, is a predisposing teratogenetic risk factor not only
for the development of type II, but also of type I diabetes. Thus, it is comprehensible
that the prevalence of type I diabetes in children could be decisively reduced by
preventing gestational hyperglycaemia in their mothers (Dörner et al., 1985)
Key words
Cytotoxicity against β-cells - Gestational hyperglycaemia - Type I diabetes - Teratogenetic
diabetes susceptibility