Background: Gestational diabetes is a prediabetic state. Sub-clinical inflammation may play a role in the transition from gestational diabetes to type 2 diabetes; the role of the autonomic nervous system as a mediating system has been raised. We aimed to study the association of the sympathetic nervous system and sub-clinical inflammation in women with gestational diabetes.
Methods: We studied 41 Caucasian women with gestational diabetes and 22 healthy pregnant and 14 non-pregnant controls. We assayed plasma noradrenaline, insulin, C-reactive protein, interleukin-6, insulin growth factor-1, serum amyloid A, steroid hormone-binding globulin, α-1 acid glycoprotein and cortisol at 2400, 0400 and 0700 h.
Results: No differences existed in the concentrations of inflammatory markers between gestational diabetes and normal pregnancy but women with gestational diabetes showed loss of variation in C-reactive protein and serum amyloid A. Levels of hormone-binding globulin were lower in hypertensive compared with normotensive women with gestational diabetes at all time points and lowest at midnight when α-1 acid glycoprotein levels were higher in hypertensive women.
Conclusions: Gestational diabetes is associated with loss of natural variation of C-reactive protein and serum amyloid A, suggesting altered modulation of inflammation. Hypertension in gestational diabetes seems not to be associated with higher levels of inflammatory markers other than α-1 acid glycoprotein.
Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.