Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association
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We determined whether non-alcoholic fatty liver is associated with an increased prevalence of chronic kidney disease in Type 1 diabetes. ⋯ Our findings demonstrate that ultrasound-diagnosed non-alcoholic fatty liver is associated with a higher prevalence of chronic kidney disease in patients with Type 1 diabetes, independently of several risk factors, including the components of the metabolic syndrome.
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Review Multicenter Study
Proposed new diagnostic criteria for gestational diabetes--a pause for thought?
New criteria for the diagnosis of gestational diabetes promulgated by the International Association of Diabetes and Pregnancy Study Groups (IADSPG) have been adopted by a number of groups, including the American Diabetes Association. These criteria will increase two- to three-fold the number of women diagnosed with gestational diabetes and have enormous resource implications. The recommendations are derived from observations made in the Hyperglycemia and Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes (HAPO) study, which demonstrated continuous relationships between maternal glucose tolerance and two clinically relevant outcomes of pregnancy (caesarean section rate and neonatal hypoglycaemia) and two surrogate measures (birth weight and cord C-peptide). ⋯ The concentration on mild degrees of hyperglycaemia may well be misplaced, as most of the outcomes usually attributed to gestational diabetes are more strongly associated with maternal obesity and weight gain in pregnancy. The new testing procedure (with diagnosis based on a single blood glucose measurement) will inevitably be imprecise. Given the many reservations about the new criteria an urgent but dispassionate debate is required on the risks, costs and benefits of their introduction.
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To evaluate self-reported satisfaction and barriers to initiating real-time continuous glucose monitoring in early pregnancy among women with pregestational diabetes. ⋯ The majority of pregnant women with diabetes found real-time continuous glucose monitoring useful and the intervention was equally tolerated regardless of diabetes type. Nevertheless, continuous glucose monitoring was frequently removed earlier than planned, primarily because of skin irritation, technical problems and inaccuracy.