Cargando…

A standardised breakfast tolerance test in pregnancy: comparison with the 75 g oral glucose tolerance test in unselected mothers and in those with impaired glucose tolerance.

There is still disagreement concerning the optimal procedure for the diagnosis of milder degrees of hyperglycaemia in pregnancy. We have compared the results of a 75 g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) and a standardised breakfast test performed one week apart in 102 non-diabetic women with a singl...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Roberts, R. N., McManus, J., Dobbs, S., Hadden, D. R.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ulster Medical Society 1997
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2448708/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9185485
_version_ 1782157207120379904
author Roberts, R. N.
McManus, J.
Dobbs, S.
Hadden, D. R.
author_facet Roberts, R. N.
McManus, J.
Dobbs, S.
Hadden, D. R.
author_sort Roberts, R. N.
collection PubMed
description There is still disagreement concerning the optimal procedure for the diagnosis of milder degrees of hyperglycaemia in pregnancy. We have compared the results of a 75 g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) and a standardised breakfast test performed one week apart in 102 non-diabetic women with a singleton pregnancy. There was poor correlation between the two tests (r = 0.15) at two hours, and neither test was predictive of adverse maternal or fetal outcome. One hundred and four patients with impaired glucose tolerance, diagnosed at 30 weeks' gestation by 75 g OGTT, subsequently had a breakfast and lunch meal profile. There was no significant correlation between the two-hour OGTT value and either the two hour post-breakfast value (r = 0.35) or the maximum profile value (r = 0.33). Using the WHO diagnostic criterion of > 8 mmol/l for the OGTT and a maximum glucose concentration > 6.8 mmol/l for the meal profile, there was no relationship between an abnormal result in either test and pregnancy outcome. In our obstetric environment, the 75 g OGTT, a standardised breakfast test, and a structured meal profile, all failed to provide a useful indication of pregnancy outcome in mothers not already known to have diabetes.
format Text
id pubmed-2448708
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 1997
publisher Ulster Medical Society
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-24487082008-07-10 A standardised breakfast tolerance test in pregnancy: comparison with the 75 g oral glucose tolerance test in unselected mothers and in those with impaired glucose tolerance. Roberts, R. N. McManus, J. Dobbs, S. Hadden, D. R. Ulster Med J Research Article There is still disagreement concerning the optimal procedure for the diagnosis of milder degrees of hyperglycaemia in pregnancy. We have compared the results of a 75 g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) and a standardised breakfast test performed one week apart in 102 non-diabetic women with a singleton pregnancy. There was poor correlation between the two tests (r = 0.15) at two hours, and neither test was predictive of adverse maternal or fetal outcome. One hundred and four patients with impaired glucose tolerance, diagnosed at 30 weeks' gestation by 75 g OGTT, subsequently had a breakfast and lunch meal profile. There was no significant correlation between the two-hour OGTT value and either the two hour post-breakfast value (r = 0.35) or the maximum profile value (r = 0.33). Using the WHO diagnostic criterion of > 8 mmol/l for the OGTT and a maximum glucose concentration > 6.8 mmol/l for the meal profile, there was no relationship between an abnormal result in either test and pregnancy outcome. In our obstetric environment, the 75 g OGTT, a standardised breakfast test, and a structured meal profile, all failed to provide a useful indication of pregnancy outcome in mothers not already known to have diabetes. Ulster Medical Society 1997-05 /pmc/articles/PMC2448708/ /pubmed/9185485 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Roberts, R. N.
McManus, J.
Dobbs, S.
Hadden, D. R.
A standardised breakfast tolerance test in pregnancy: comparison with the 75 g oral glucose tolerance test in unselected mothers and in those with impaired glucose tolerance.
title A standardised breakfast tolerance test in pregnancy: comparison with the 75 g oral glucose tolerance test in unselected mothers and in those with impaired glucose tolerance.
title_full A standardised breakfast tolerance test in pregnancy: comparison with the 75 g oral glucose tolerance test in unselected mothers and in those with impaired glucose tolerance.
title_fullStr A standardised breakfast tolerance test in pregnancy: comparison with the 75 g oral glucose tolerance test in unselected mothers and in those with impaired glucose tolerance.
title_full_unstemmed A standardised breakfast tolerance test in pregnancy: comparison with the 75 g oral glucose tolerance test in unselected mothers and in those with impaired glucose tolerance.
title_short A standardised breakfast tolerance test in pregnancy: comparison with the 75 g oral glucose tolerance test in unselected mothers and in those with impaired glucose tolerance.
title_sort standardised breakfast tolerance test in pregnancy: comparison with the 75 g oral glucose tolerance test in unselected mothers and in those with impaired glucose tolerance.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2448708/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9185485
work_keys_str_mv AT robertsrn astandardisedbreakfasttolerancetestinpregnancycomparisonwiththe75goralglucosetolerancetestinunselectedmothersandinthosewithimpairedglucosetolerance
AT mcmanusj astandardisedbreakfasttolerancetestinpregnancycomparisonwiththe75goralglucosetolerancetestinunselectedmothersandinthosewithimpairedglucosetolerance
AT dobbss astandardisedbreakfasttolerancetestinpregnancycomparisonwiththe75goralglucosetolerancetestinunselectedmothersandinthosewithimpairedglucosetolerance
AT haddendr astandardisedbreakfasttolerancetestinpregnancycomparisonwiththe75goralglucosetolerancetestinunselectedmothersandinthosewithimpairedglucosetolerance
AT robertsrn standardisedbreakfasttolerancetestinpregnancycomparisonwiththe75goralglucosetolerancetestinunselectedmothersandinthosewithimpairedglucosetolerance
AT mcmanusj standardisedbreakfasttolerancetestinpregnancycomparisonwiththe75goralglucosetolerancetestinunselectedmothersandinthosewithimpairedglucosetolerance
AT dobbss standardisedbreakfasttolerancetestinpregnancycomparisonwiththe75goralglucosetolerancetestinunselectedmothersandinthosewithimpairedglucosetolerance
AT haddendr standardisedbreakfasttolerancetestinpregnancycomparisonwiththe75goralglucosetolerancetestinunselectedmothersandinthosewithimpairedglucosetolerance