SummaryMitochondrial DNA is exclusively maternally inherited. We recently found the prevalence of diabetic patients with an A to G transition at position 3243 of leucine tRNA (3243 base pair (bp) mutation) to be nearly 1% in randomly selected Japanese subjects. Here, we report the higher prevalence of diabetic patients with the 3243 bp mutation in a specific Japanese population of women attending a diabetic pregnancy clinic. Of 102 patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus 6 (5.9 %) were positive for the mutation, 1 (8.3 %) of 12 patients with gestational diabetes and 2 (5.9 %) out of 34 borderline diabetic patients. In contrast, none of 64 patients (0 %) with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus had the 3243 bp mutation. Moreover, there was a difference in the prevalence of spontaneous abortions between patients with and without this mutation (27.3 vs 12.4%). Among nine probands with the mutation, four had a history of one spontaneous abortion (p = 0.0518) and two had a history of two abortions (p = 0.0479). Two probands had a spontaneous abortion even while under strict diabetic metabolic control. The 3243 bp mutation thus may cause spontaneous abortion during pregnancy. [Diabetologia (1995) 38: 809-815] Key words Mitochondrial DNA mutation, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, gestational diabetes mellitus.It is well-known that one of the main causes of spontaneous abortion is an abnormality in the fetus rather than a problem in the mother [1]. The prevalence of abortion in diabetic women is higher in the high-titre HbAI: group during the first trimester [2,3]. Pre-pregnancy education courses are available in diabetic pregnancy clinics in Japan, and diabetic mothers are instructed to keep postprandial blood
A 75-g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) was performed in 615 nonobese pregnant women (mean +/- SD age 29.7 +/- 4.3 yr) who were referred to the Division of Internal Medicine at our diabetes center because of glycosuria. Seventy-seven cases were found to have urinary glucose at the first trimester, 185 at the second trimester, and 353 at the third trimester. With their 75-g OGTT results, the diagnostic criteria of borderline (formulated by the Japan Diabetes Society), impaired glucose tolerance (IGT; defined by the World Health Organization [WHO]), and gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM; determined by the Japan Society of Obstetrics& Gynecology standards) were compared through blood glucose (BG) curves and immunoreactive insulin (IRI) responses. Borderline (fasting BG greater than or equal to 6.1 and less than 7.8 mM and 2-h BG greater than or equal to 6.7 and less than 11.1 mM) is neither diabetes nor normal. IGT is as referred to by the WHO. GDM exceeds two points of fasting BG greater than or equal to 5.6 mM, 1-h BG greater than or equal to 10.0 mM, or 2-h BG greater than or equal to 8.3 mM. Diabetes mellitus (DM) is as referred to by the Japan Diabetes Society (same as the WHO). The prevalence of abnormal glucose tolerance among all 615 pregnant women was 54.6% in borderline, 24.5% in IGT, 7.3% in GDM, and 3.4% in DM. The 2-h BG levels in IGT during the first trimester were higher than in borderline (P less than 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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