PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Women who eat fried food regularly before conceiving are at increased risk of developing gestational diabetes during pregnancy

2014-10-09
(Press-News.org) New research published in Diabetologia (the journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes) shows that women who eat fried food regularly before conceiving are at increased risk of developing gestational diabetes during pregnancy. The research is led by Drs Cuilin Zhang and Wei Bao, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD, part of the US National Institutes of Health) Rockville, MD, USA, and colleagues.

Gestational diabetes (GDM) is a complication that can arise during pregnancy, and is characterised by abnormally high blood glucose during the pregnancy (especially in the final 3 months). It can lead to increased birthweight of the child, as well jaundice and other complications. When left untreated, it can cause complications or stillbirth. Women who have GDM are more likely to later develop full blown type 2 diabetes.

Recently, frequent consumption of fried foods has been linked to a higher risk of overweight and obesity in two Mediterranean cohorts. However, there are few prospective epidemiological studies examining the association of fried food consumption with other health outcomes, including GDM. Thus in this new study, the authors examined the association between prepregnancy fried food consumption, both at home and away from home, and the risk of subsequent GDM.

The authors included 21,079 singleton pregnancies from 15,027 women in the Nurses' Health Study II (NHS II) cohort. NHS II is an ongoing prospective cohort study of 116,671 female nurses in the USA aged 25–44 years at the start of study in 1989. The participants received a questionnaire every two years regarding disease outcomes and lifestyle behaviours, such as smoking status and medication use. Since 1991 and every four years thereafter, NHSII investigators have collected diet information, including consumption of fried foods at home and away from home, using a validated food frequency questionnaire (FFQ).

For fried food consumption, participants were asked "how often do you eat fried food away from home (e.g. French fries, fried chicken, fried fish)?" and "how often do you eat food that is fried at home?" Both questions had four possible frequency responses: less than once per week, 1–3 times per week, 4–6 times per week, or daily. The researchers analysed fried food consumption at home and away from home separately, as well as total fried food consumption. In addition, they asked the participants what kind of frying fat/oils they usually used at home, with the possible responses as follows: real butter, margarine, vegetable oil, vegetable shortening, or lard.

The authors documented 847 incident GDM pregnancies during 10 years of follow-up. After adjustment for age, parity, dietary and non-dietary factors, the risk ratios for developing GDM among women who consumed total fried foods 1–3, 4–6, and 7 or more times per week, compared with those who consumed less than once per week, were 1.13, 1.31, and 2.18 respectively (thus a more-than-doubling of risk for 7 times or more per week or more compared with less than once per week).

The association persisted after further adjustments were made for varying body-mass index (BMI). After this, the risk ratios of GDM among women who consumed total fried foods 1-3, 4-6, and 7 or more times per week, compared with those who consumed less than once per week, were 1.06, 1.14, and 1.88 respectively (thus an 88% increased risk for 7 or more times per week compared with less than once per week).

The authors say: "The potential detrimental effects of fried food consumption on GDM risk may result from the modification of foods and frying medium and generation of harmful by-products during the frying process. Frying deteriorates oils through the processes of oxidation and hydrogenation, leading to an increase in the absorption of oil degradation products by the foods being fried, and also a loss of unsaturated fatty acids such as linoleic and linolenic acids and an increase in the corresponding trans fatty acids such as trans-linoleic acids and trans-linolenic acids."

They add: "Frying also results in significantly higher levels of dietary advanced glycation end products (AGEs), the derivatives of glucose-protein or glucose-lipid interactions. Recently, AGEs have been implicated in insulin resistance, pancreatic beta-cell damage, and diabetes, partly because they promote oxidative stress and inflammation. Moreover, intervention studies with a diet low in AGEs have shown significantly improved insulin sensitivity, reduced oxidant stress, and alleviated inflammation."

When analysed separately, the authors found that there was a statistically significant association of GDM with fried food consumption away from home, but not with fried food consumption at home. The authors say: "Deterioration of oils during frying is more profound when the oils are reused, a practice more common away from home than at home. This may partly explain why we observed a stronger association of GDM risk with fried foods consumed away from home than fried foods consumed at home."

Overall, the authors conclude: "We observed that frequent fried food consumption was significantly and positively associated with the risk of incident GDM in a prospective cohort study. Our study indicates potential benefits of limiting fried food consumption in the prevention of GDM in women of reproductive age. Further studies are warranted to confirm our findings and to discover the underlying mechanisms."

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Online intervention tool for physician trainees may improve care of substance users

2014-10-09
Online learning interventions and small group debriefings can improve medical residents' attitudes and communication skills toward patients with substance use disorders, and may result in improved care for these patients, according to a new study from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and Drexel University College of Medicine published online in Academic Medicine. The study used a novel internet-based learning module designed to improve the communication skills of primary care physicians during screenings and brief counseling sessions with ...

New gene therapy for 'bubble boy' disease appears effective, safe, study in NEJM reports

New gene therapy for bubble boy disease appears effective, safe, study in NEJM reports
2014-10-09
BOSTON (October 9, 2014) –A new form of gene therapy for boys with X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency syndrome (SCID-X1), a life-threatening condition also known as "bubble boy" disease, appears to be both effective and safe, according to a collaborative research team from Dana-Farber/Boston Children's Cancer and Blood Disorders Center and other institutions conducting an international clinical trial. Early data suggest that the therapy may avoid the late-developing leukemia seen in a quarter of SCID-X1 patients in pioneering gene therapy trials in Europe more ...

Novel protein in heart muscle linked to cardiac short-circuiting and sudden cardiac deaths

2014-10-09
NEW YORK, NY – Cardiovascular scientists at NYU Langone Medical Center have identified in mouse models a protein known as Pcp4 as a regulator of the heart's rhythm. Additionally, when the Pcp4 gene is disrupted, it can cause ventricular arrhythmias. Results from this animal study were released online Oct. 8 in the peer-reviewed publication, The Journal of Clinical Investigation. "This study demonstrates that Purkinje cell protein-4 (Pcp4) is not only important in maintaining the heart's normal rhythmic behavior, but that when Pcp4 expression is reduced, it short-circuits ...

Patient's dramatic response and resistance to cancer drug traced to unsuspected mutations

Patients dramatic response and resistance to cancer drug traced to unsuspected mutations
2014-10-09
BOSTON – The DNA of a woman whose lethal thyroid cancer unexpectedly "melted away" for 18 months has revealed new mechanisms of cancer response and resistance to the drug everolimus, said researchers from Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard. The investigators discovered two previously unknown mutations in the cancer's DNA. One made the woman's cancer extraordinarily sensitive to everolimus, accounting for the remarkably long-lasting response. The second mutation was found in the DNA of her tumor after it had evolved resistance ...

Gene therapy shows promise for severe combined immunodeficiency

2014-10-09
WHAT: Researchers have found that gene therapy using a modified delivery system, or vector, can restore the immune systems of children with X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID-X1), a rare, life-threatening inherited condition that primarily affects boys. Previous efforts to treat SCID-X1 with gene therapy were initially successful, but approximately one-quarter of the children developed leukemia two to five years after treatment. Results from a study partially funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), a component of the National ...

Skin exposure may contribute to early risk for food allergies

2014-10-09
(NEW YORK – October 08, 2014) Many children may become allergic to peanuts before they first eat them, and skin exposure may be contribute to early sensitization, according to a study in mice led by Mount Sinai researchers and published today in the Journal of Clinical Investigation. Early in the process of developing an allergy, skin exposure to food allergens contributes to "sensitization", which means the skin is reactive to an antigen, such as peanuts, especially by repeated exposure. The question of how peanut allergies start is an important one, given the ...

Designing rivers: environmental flows for ecosystem services in rivers natural and novel

2014-10-09
Last spring, the Colorado River reached its delta for the first time in 16 years, flowing into Pacific Ocean at the Gulf of California after wetting 70 miles of long-dry channels through the Sonoran Desert. The planned 8-week burst of water from Mexico's Morelos Dam on the Arizona-Mexico border was the culmination of years of diplomatic negotiations between the United States and Mexico and campaigning from scientists and conservation organizations. Now ecologists wait to see how the short drink of water will affect the parched landscape. This year's spring pulse held ...

More appropriate use of cardiac stress testing with imaging could reduce health costs

2014-10-09
New York City – October 8, 2014 – In a new study recently published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, researchers at NYU Langone Medical Center concluded that overuse of cardiac stress testing with imaging has led to rising healthcare costs and unnecessary radiation exposure to patients. In what is believed to be the first comprehensive examination of trends in cardiac stress testing utilizing imaging, researchers also showed that there are no significant racial or ethnic health disparities in its use. They also made national estimates of the cost of ...

Healthy lifestyle may cut stroke risk in half for women

2014-10-08
MINNEAPOLIS – Women with a healthy diet and lifestyle may be less likely to have a stroke by more than half, according to a study published in the October 8, 2014, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. The study looked at five factors that make up a healthy lifestyle: healthy diet; moderate alcohol consumption; never smoking; physically active; and healthy body mass index (BMI). Compared with women with none of the five healthy factors, women with all five factors had a 54-percent lower risk of stroke. "Because ...

Study finds early signs of heart trouble in obese youth

2014-10-08
WASHINGTON (Oct. 8, 2014) — A study that used two-dimensional echocardiography to closely examine the hearts of 100 children and teens found physical and functional signs of future heart problems already developing in obese children. In the study, published online today in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, researchers from the University of Leipzig Heart Center in Leipzig, Germany, performed the echocardiograms on 61 obese children and 40 non-obese children ages 9 to 16. The two-dimensional echocardiogram uses ultrasound to provide cross sectional ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Your stroke risk might be higher if your parents divorced during your childhood

Life satisfaction measurement tool provides robust information across nations, genders, ages, languages

Adult children of divorced parents at higher risk of stroke

Anti-climate action groups tend to arise in countries with stronger climate change efforts

Some coral "walk" towards blue or white light, using rolling, sliding or pulsing movements to migrate, per experiments with free-living mushroom coral Cycloseris cyclolites

Discovery of the significance of birth in the maintenance of quiescent neural stem cells

Severe weather and major power outages increasingly coincide across the US

Bioluminescent cell imaging gets a glow-up

Float like a jellyfish: New coral mobility mechanisms uncovered

Severe weather and major power outages increasingly coincide across the U.S.

Who to vaccinate first? Penn engineers answer a life-or-death question with network theory

Research shows PTSD, anxiety may affect reproductive health of women firefighters

U of M Medical School research team receives $1.2M grant to study Tourette syndrome treatment

In the hunt for new and better enzymes, AI steps to the fore

Females have a 31% higher associated risk of developing long COVID, UT Health San Antonio-led RECOVER study shows

Final synthetic yeast chromosome unlocks new era in biotechnology

AI-powered prediction model enhances blood transfusion decision-making in ICU patients

MD Anderson Research Highlights for January 22, 2025

Scholastica announces integration with Crossmark by Crossref to expand its research integrity support

Could brain aging be mom’s fault? The X chromosome factor

Subterranean ‘islands’: strongholds in a potentially less turbulent world

Complete recombination map of the human-genome, a major step in genetics

Fighting experience plays key role in brain chemical’s control of male aggression

Trends in preventive aspirin use by atherosclerotic cardiovascular risk

Sex differences in long COVID

Medically recommended vs nonmedical cannabis use among US adults

Spanish scientists discover how the gut modulates the development of inflammatory conditions

Compact comb lights the way for next-gen photonics

New research reveals how location influences how our immune system fights disease

AI in cell research: Moscot reveals cell dynamics in unprecedented detail

[Press-News.org] Women who eat fried food regularly before conceiving are at increased risk of developing gestational diabetes during pregnancy