
LEXINGTON
DIABETIC CENTER
St. Joseph Office Park
1401 Harrodsburg Rd.
Suite B-280
Lexington, KY 40504
MAP
>>
859.977.8855
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FRANKFORT
DIABETIC CENTER
Prevention Park
103 Diagnostic Drive
Suite B
Frankfort, KY 40601
MAP
>>
(502) 223-8812
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| Gestational Diabetes
You are 28
weeks pregnant. Your health care provider has just told you that
you have gestational diabetes. Should you be concerned about gestational
diabetes?
The short answer: yes. Good care means a lot for your health and
your baby's health.
What is gestational
diabetes?
Pregnant women who have never had diabetes before but who have
high blood sugar (glucose) levels during pregnancy are said to
have gestational diabetes. Gestational diabetes affects about
4% of all pregnant women - about 135,000 cases of gestational
diabetes in the United States each year.
We don't know what causes gestational diabetes, but we have some
clues. The placenta supports the baby as it grows. Hormones from
the placenta help the baby develop. But these hormones also block
the action of the mother's insulin in her body. This problem is
called insulin resistance. Insulin resistance makes it hard for
the mother's body to use insulin. She may need up to three times
as much insulin.
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Gestational
diabetes starts when your body is not able to make and use all the
insulin it needs for pregnancy. Without enough insulin, glucose
cannot leave the blood and be changed to energy. Glucose builds
up in the blood to high levels. This is called hyperglycemia.
How gestational diabetes
can affect your baby
Gestational diabetes affects the mother in late pregnancy, after
the baby's body has been formed, but while the baby is busy growing.
Because of this, gestational diabetes does not cause the kinds of
birth defects sometimes seen in babies whose mothers had diabetes
before pregnancy.
However, untreated or poorly controlled gestational diabetes can
hurt your baby. When you have gestational diabetes, your pancreas
works overtime to produce insulin, but the insulin does not lower
your blood glucose levels. Although insulin does not cross the placenta,
glucose and other nutrients do. So extra blood glucose goes through
the placenta, giving the baby high blood glucose levels. This causes
the baby's pancreas to make extra insulin to get rid of the blood
glucose. Since the baby is getting more energy than it needs to
grow and develop, the extra energy is stored as fat.
This can lead to macrosomia, or a "fat" baby. Babies with macrosomia
face health problems of their own, including damage to their shoulders
during birth. Because of the extra insulin made by the baby's pancreas,
newborns may have very low blood glucose levels at birth and are
also at higher risk for breathing problems. Babies with excess insulin
become children who are at risk for obesity and adults who are at
risk for type 2 diabetes.
Treating gestational
diabetes
Because gestational diabetes can hurt you and your baby, you need
to start treatment quickly. Treatment for gestational diabetes aims
to keep blood glucose levels equal to those of pregnant women who
don't have gestational diabetes. Treatment for gestational diabetes
always includes special meal plans and scheduled physical activity.
It may also include daily blood glucose testing and insulin injections.
You will need help from your doctor, nurse educator, and other members
of your health care team so that your treatment for gestational
diabetes can be changed as needed.
For you as the mother-to-be, treatment for gestational diabetes
helps lower the risk of a cesarean section birth that very large
babies may require. Sticking with your treatment for gestational
diabetes will give you a healthy pregnancy and birth, and may help
your baby avoid future poor health.
Gestational
diabetes -- Looking ahead
Gestational diabetes usually goes away after pregnancy. But once
you've had gestational diabetes, your chances are 2 in 3 that it
will return in future pregnancies. In a few women, however, pregnancy
uncovers type 1 or type 2 diabetes. It is hard to tell whether these
women have gestational diabetes or have just started showing their
diabetes during pregnancy. These women will need to continue diabetes
treatment after pregnancy.
Many women who have gestational diabetes go on to develop type 2
diabetes years later. There seems to be a link between the tendency
to have gestational diabetes and type 2 diabetes. Gestational diabetes
and type 2 diabetes both involve insulin resistance. Certain basic
lifestyle changes may help prevent diabetes after gestational diabetes.
Losing weight
Are you more than 20% over your ideal body weight? Losing even a
few pounds can help you avoid developing type 2 diabetes.
Making healthy food choices
Follow simple daily guidelines, like eating a variety of foods
including fresh fruits and vegetables, limiting fat intake to 30%
or less of daily calories, and watching your portion size. Healthy
eating habits can go a long way in preventing diabetes and other
health problems.
Exercising
Regular exercise allows your body to use glucose without extra
insulin. This helps combat insulin resistance and is what makes
exercise helpful to people with diabetes. Never start an exercise
program without checking with your doctor first.
Keeping
worry in perspective
While gestational diabetes is a cause for concern, the good news
is that you and your health care team - your doctor, obstetrician,
nurse educator, and dietitian - work together to lower your high
blood glucose levels. And with this help, you can turn your concern
into a healthy pregnancy for you, and a healthy start for your baby.
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