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Early growth delay in diabetic pregnancy: relation to psychomotor development at age 4.

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TLDR
This study suggests that children with a history of growth delay in early diabetic pregnancy should be screened for possible developmental impairment.
Abstract
Ninety nine consecutive insulin dependent and 101 non-diabetic pregnant women were examined by ultrasonograph to assess early fetal growth. In 42 of the diabetic mothers and three of the non-diabetic mothers the scan showed early intrauterine growth delay. At 4-5 years of age all children available for study were evaluated by the Denver developmental screening test. Only 23 of the 34 children of diabetic mothers with early intrauterine growth delay had normal test scores compared with 46 of the 50 children of diabetic mothers with normal intrauterine growth. The children failed in personal-social development, gross motor development, and particularly in language and speech development. Children of diabetic mothers with normal early fetal growth had scores very similar to those of the children of non-diabetic mothers, of whom 76 of the 86 tested had normal scores. This study suggests that children with a history of growth delay in early diabetic pregnancy should be screened for possible developmental impairment.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Correlations between antepartum maternal metabolism and intelligence of offspring.

TL;DR: The associations between gestational ketonemia in the mother and a lower IQ in the child warrant continued efforts to avoid ketoacidosis and accelerated starvation in all pregnant women.
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Gestational diabetes: The consequences of not treating

TL;DR: In this article, a matched control of 555 gravidas, diagnosed after 37 weeks, were compared with 1110 subjects treated for gestational diabetes mellitus and 1110 nondiabetic subjects matched from the same delivery year for obesity, parity, ethnicity, and gestational age at delivery.
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Long-term developmental follow-up of infants of diabetic mothers☆☆☆★★★

TL;DR: The results indicate that mothers with insulin-dependent diabetes who maintain good control during pregnancy can expect to have infants who are neurodevelopmentally normal; mothers whose diabetes is less well controlled may have infants with less optimal neurodevelopment.
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Assessment of the quality of general movements in fetuses and infants of women with type-I diabetes mellitus

TL;DR: The results indicate that type-I diabetes can have a negative impact on prenatally observed GMs, and consistently normal GMs indicate normal neurodevelopmental outcome at 10 months whereas in the group with abnormal GMs reduced Bayley-scores may occur.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of early growth delay on subsequent fetal growth and functional development: a study on diabetic pregnancy

TL;DR: Results indicate that disorders occurring in early life may underlie abnormal functional development in later life, whereas (catch up) growth is mainly determined during the second half of pregnancy.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Denver Developmental Screening Test

TL;DR: The Denver Developmental Screening Test (DDST) was devised to provide a simple method of screening for evidences of slow development in infants and preschool children.
Journal ArticleDOI

Elevated maternal hemoglobin A1c in early pregnancy and major congenital anomalies in infants of diabetic mothers.

TL;DR: Fetal malformations occur before eight weeks of gestation (postmenstrual dates), when most diabetic pregnant women have not yet come to medical attention, and there has been no objective method to assess control.
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Neuropsychological deficits in children of diabetic mothers

TL;DR: The association of diabetes with acetonuria in respect to I.Q. of offspring was independent of duration of pregnancy, and no significant effect of insulin reactions in the mother on I. Q. of the offspring was demonstrated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Abilities of children who were small-for-gestational-age babies

TL;DR: It is concluded that prolonged slow growth in utero affects a child's later development and abilities, in particular, perceptual performance and motor ability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Outcome at ages 1, 3, and 5 years of children born to diabetic women.

TL;DR: A prospective study of infants born to women with diabetes mellitus finds the presence of acetone in the urine during pregnancy had a significant, adverse effect on intellectual status of the offspring at 5 years of age.
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