A 1-hour postpartum oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) outperformed the standard 2-hour test for predicting future dysglycemia in women with and without a history of gestational diabetes ...
2-hour glucose values. One-hour glucose at 3 months postpartum was the strongest predictor for future dysglycemia risk. The use of a 1-hour oral glucose tolerance test instead of a 2-hour OGTT may ...
followed by 2-hour glucose. HealthDay News — Higher 1-hour blood glucose on an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) at 3 months postpartum can predict the risk for dysglycemia at 5 years ...
One-hour glucose was strongest predictor of dysglycemia on regression analyses, followed by 2-hour glucose. (HealthDay News) — Higher 1-hour blood glucose on an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) at 3 ...
11.2 mmol/l and 2-hour plasma glucose >9.9 mmol/l. One or more elevated values during an OGTT resulted in the diagnosis of GDM. All participants attended a 1-day visit at the Kuopio University ...
Caring for a baby is a full-time job, often causing new mothers to overlook their own health needs. This situation is exemplified by the low compliance with postpartum glucose screening among women ...
One-hour glucose emerged as the strongest predictor of dysglycemia among women with gestational diabetes mellitus, followed by two-hour glucose (changes in CCI, 13.0 and 12.8 percent, respectively).