ABSTRACT
Fifty gestational diabetic women were studied to determine the interaction of blood
pressure, insulin resistance, and the effect of exogenous insulin on blood pressure
response. Gestational diabetes was diagnosed according to the criteria affirmed by
the Third International Workshop-Conference on Gestational Diabetes at 20 to 32 weeks'
gestation. At diagnosis, all women were placed on a standard diet and performed glucose
monitoring on arising and 1 hour after meals. The criteria for initiation of insulin
included fasting whole blood finger stick glucose more than 90 mg/dL, ketonuria that
could only be cleared by increasing carbohydrate to a level causing postprandial hyperglycemia,
or postprandial glucose levels at 1 hour above 140 mg/dL. Of the initial cohort, 28
required insulin to maintain target glycemia. Within this group, there was a significant
positive correlation between mean arterial pressures at initiation of therapy for
gestational diabetes mellitus and insulin requirement quantified by the amount of
insulin required to maintain euglycemia at term (r
2 = 0.259; P = 0.006). The initiation of insulin was associated with a significant blood pressure
increase in this group when compared with values prior to insulin administration or
to values in the group treated with diet alone. These observations are consistent
with an interaction of blood pressure and insulin resistance as reflected by insulin
requirement in women with gestational diabetes mellitus.
Keywords
Gestational diabetes mellitus - insulin - hypertension