Evaluation of Chlorpropamide in Chemical Diabetes Diagnosed during Pregnancy

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Abstract

The intravenous glucose tolerance test (I.V.G.T.T.) was used to diagnose chemical diabetes during pregnancy in 180 women, 50 of whom subsequently received chlorpropamide therapy in a daily dosage of 100 mg; the remainder had no drug therapy. Preliminary work showed the I.V.G.T.T. to be reproducible in the second and third trimesters but not in the puerperium in normal pregnancy. Though intravenous glucose tolerance deteriorates between the second and third trimesters in women with no features of diabetes, a significant improvement occurs after a course of chlorpropamide in a daily dosage of 100 mg during pregnancy in chemical diabetes, but this treatment did not enhance the rate of return to normal glucose tolerance post partum. Plasma glucose and insulin studies showed no evidence of hypoglycaemia or hyperinsulinism in the mother at. © 1973, British Medical Journal Publishing Group. All rights reserved.

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Sutherland, H. W., Stowers, J. M., Cormack, J. D., & Bewsher, P. D. (1973). Evaluation of Chlorpropamide in Chemical Diabetes Diagnosed during Pregnancy. British Medical Journal, 3(5870), 9–13. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.3.5870.9

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