gestational diabetes - guide please......
hi everyone -
this is my 29th week of pregnancy, and i went for this gulcose screening test. but when the results came they told me, i may have a gestational diabetes and have asked me to go for a 4 hour gulcose screening test. i am really worried about this.
will this affect my baby in anyway or will there be any problems during my delivery time.
will gestational diabetes go away as soon as the delivery is over. i am very confussed as well as scared.
please help ...
thanxs in advance
gayathri
Re: gestational diabetes - guide please......
Quote:
Originally Posted by sonumickey
hi everyone -
this is my 29th week of pregnancy, and i went for this gulcose screening test. but when the results came they told me, i may have a gestational diabetes and have asked me to go for a 4 hour gulcose screening test. i am really worried about this.
will this affect my baby in anyway or will there be any problems during my delivery time.
will gestational diabetes go away as soon as the delivery is over. i am very confussed as well as scared.
please help ...
thanxs in advance
gayathri
I know a few friends of mine who had this during their pregnancy.. The only concern is that you have to watch what you eat. you have to be careful not to eat too much of rice and sweet stuff. I'm not an expert on this and dont want to misguide you.. At the same time, this is not something you have to get too scared or confused..
Re: gestational diabetes - guide please......
Quote:
Originally Posted by sonumickey
hi everyone -
this is my 29th week of pregnancy, and i went for this gulcose screening test. but when the results came they told me, i may have a gestational diabetes and have asked me to go for a 4 hour gulcose screening test. i am really worried about this.
will this affect my baby in anyway or will there be any problems during my delivery time.
will gestational diabetes go away as soon as the delivery is over. i am very confussed as well as scared.
please help ...
thanxs in advance
gayathri
Since you are in the 29th week of pregnancy, this means your baby (specifically its body) has already formed. So the baby will not be born with any congenital defects as such. However, what can happen is that the glucose that your pancreas produces will cross the placenta into the baby's bloodstream. Naturally, the response will be for the baby's pancreas to increase insulin production... increased insulin production will result in increased glucose uptake by the cells, in particular red blood cells, muscle cells, and fat cells. As you may be knowing already, glucose is used by the cells as an energy source. However, your baby does not need so much energy at this point... what will happen is that the extra energy will be stored in fat cells (adipose tissue). So essentially, your baby is at risk of obesity, and also, might experience breathing difficulties when born, due to very low levels of glucose in the blood. Type II diabetes is another risk when the baby becomes an adult; what happens in this case is that the cells do not respond properly as they should to increased levels of insulin... so the blood sugar level remains abnormally high.
Best thing I can recommend for you is to modify your diet so that you are taking in more natural sugars than simple sugars. Complex sugars are also good. Exercise is also good. When you exercise, your muscle cells convert the gluocose to ATP.
Also as you have had gestational diabetes during pregnancy, this puts you at a higher risk of diabetes in later life. So I would advise you to continue with a good exercise program, even after the baby is born.