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Peter Damm

Researcher at University of Copenhagen

Publications -  375
Citations -  21423

Peter Damm is an academic researcher from University of Copenhagen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Diabetes mellitus. The author has an hindex of 66, co-authored 338 publications receiving 17742 citations. Previous affiliations of Peter Damm include University of Copenhagen Faculty of Health Sciences & Health Science University.

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International association of diabetes and pregnancy study groups recommendations on the diagnosis and classification of hyperglycemia in pregnancy.

TL;DR: The Brazilian study provided evidence that adverse perinatal outcomes are associated with levels of maternal glycemia below those diagnostic of GDM by American Diabetes Association or World Health Organization criteria, however, the results were potentially confounded by the treatment of G DM.
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Type 2 diabetes across generations: from pathophysiology to prevention and management

TL;DR: Evidence is emerging that a substantial part of diabetes susceptibility is acquired early in life, probably owing to fetal or neonatal programming via epigenetic phenomena, and maternal and early childhood health might, therefore, be crucial to the development of effective prevention strategies.
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High Prevalence of Type 2 Diabetes and Pre-Diabetes in Adult Offspring of Women with Gestational Diabetes Mellitus or Type 1 Diabetes - The Role of Intrauterine Hyperglycemia

TL;DR: A hyperglycemic intrauterine environment appears to be involved in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes/pre-diabetes in adult offspring of primarily Caucasian women with either diet-treated GDM or type 1 diabetes during pregnancy.
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Gestational diabetes mellitus.

TL;DR: Gestational diabetes mellitus is the most common complication in pregnancy and has short-term and long-term effects in both mother and offspring, and dietary modification and increased physical activity are the primary treatments, but pharmacotherapy, usually insulin, is used when normoglycaemia is not achieved.
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Outcomes in Type 1 Diabetic Pregnancies: A nationwide, population-based study

TL;DR: Type 1 diabetic pregnancies are still complicated by considerably higher rates of severe perinatal complications compared with the background population, and women with poor self-care are at the highest risk.