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Medical Science Monitor 2010-Dec

Assessment of pregnancy outcomes in Czech and Slovak women with narcolepsy.

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Eszter Maurovich-Horvat
Mária Tormášiová
Jana Slonková
David Kemlink
Lajos Maurovich-Horvat
Soňa Nevšímalová
Martin Pretl
Karel Sonka

Nyckelord

Abstrakt

BACKGROUND

Narcolepsy is associated with altered metabolic functions. We sought to investigate the effect of narcolepsy on pregnancy and newborns.

METHODS

A retrospective cohort study of patients in whom the first symptoms of narcolepsy appeared before or after pregnancy. Our study included 54 women, mothers of a total of 110 children (37 with symptoms of narcolepsy before and during pregnancy, 17 developed the narcolepsy syndrome only after childbirth). With only 1 exception, none of the patients were treated with drugs during pregnancy.

RESULTS

We did not find any significant differences between the 2 groups in the registered parameters of: age of mothers at delivery, history of spontaneous abortion, alcohol and nicotine consumption, medication, complications during pregnancy, symptoms of narcolepsy, weight gain during pregnancy, length of pregnancy and delivery, complications during delivery, and weight and length of the newborn. The women experiencing symptoms of narcolepsy before or during pregnancy were found to have a significantly higher total number of pregnancy complications (35.8%) than those with later onset of symptoms (9.1%), although the complications were not clinically significant. More patients in the symptomatic group tended to have impaired glucose tolerance or type 2 diabetes, compared to the asymptomatic group.

CONCLUSIONS

The study revealed no clinically relevant adverse effects of narcolepsy on pregnancy, childbirth or the newborn.

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