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Volume 50, Issue 6, Pages 715-719 (June 2001)


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Beta-cell function and visceral fat in lactating women with a history of gestational diabetes

Ruth M. McManus, Ian Cunningham, Annette Watson, Lynda Harker, Diane T. Finegood

Abstract 

Lactation has been recommended as beneficial for the maternal metabolic abnormalities associated with glucose intolerance and diabetes risk, although associations between breastfeeding (BF), glucose tolerance, and adipose tissue distribution are unknown. Therefore, a population of women with recent gestational diabetes (GDM) was evaluated with comparison of results for lactating versus nonlactating women. A total of 26 women participated (14 BF and 12 nonbreastfeeding [nonBF]) with a singleton vaginal delivery after 36 weeks gestation. At 3 months postpartum, each woman completed a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT), a frequently sampled intravenous glucose tolerance test (FSIGT), and computed tomography (CT) scanning for adipose distribution and mass. Insulin sensitivity was not significantly different between BF and nonBF groups (4.97 [plusmn] 0.78 v 3.44 [plusmn] 1.0 [times ] 10[minus ]4 min[minus ]1/([mu ]U/mL) nor was glucose effectiveness (1.92 [plusmn] 0.22 v 1.56 [plusmn] 0.19 [times ] 10[minus ]2 min[minus ]1). However, the disposition index (DI) (insulin sensitivity [SI] [times ] acute insulin response to glucose [AIRg]) was higher in the BF group (129.9 [plusmn] 26.0 v 53.4 [plusmn] 18.0 [times ] 10[minus ]4 min[minus ]1; P = .03). Visceral fat (103 [plusmn] 14 v 97 [plusmn] 15 cm2) and subcutaneous fat (362 [plusmn] 36 v 460 [plusmn] 68 cm2) were similar between the groups. We conclude that 3 months of BF in a population with previous GDM was associated with improved pancreatic [beta ]-cell function, but not with any difference in measures of adiposity.

No full text is available. To read the body of this article, please view the PDF online.

From the Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Department of Medicine, The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario; and the School of Kinesiology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada.

 Supported by a grant from The Physicians' Services Incorporated Foundation, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

PII: S0026-0495(01)93531-0

doi:10.1053/meta.2001.23304


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