Accelerated Starvation in Pregnancy: Implications for Dietary Treatment of Obesity and Gestational Diabetes mellitus

Abstract
The biological significance of ketonemia of brief duration and moderate proportions during pregnancy remains uncertain. Thus, controversy persists about whether caloric restriction for obese women during pregnancy, particularly when the obesity is complicated by gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), constitutes appropriate therapy. We have demonstrated, in a rigorously controlled setting using a Clinical Research Center, that all of the features of ‘accelerated starvation’ become manifest after 14 h and before 18 h of dietary deprivation. Women with GDM exhibit the same capacity for early ‘accelerated starvation’ as in normal pregnancy; thus, their insulin deficiency and insulin resistance do not appear to be sufficient to render them increasedly at risk for uncontrolled catabolism. Some cautious exploration of the use of hypocaloric diets as a therapeutic approach to the metabolic disturbances of GDM may be justified.