Gestational Diabetes Open Access Articles

 Gestational diabetes is diabetes diagnosed for the primary time during pregnancy (gestation). Like other sorts of diabetes, gestational diabetes affects how your cells use sugar (glucose). There are two classes of gestational diabetes. Women with class A1 can manage it through diet and exercise. Those who have class A2 need to take insulin or other medications. Gestational diabetes goes away after you give birth. During the time of pregnancy, your placenta makes hormones that cause glucose to create up in your blood. Usually, your pancreas can send enough insulin to handle it. But if your body can not make enough insulin or stops using insulin love it should, your blood glucose levels rise, and you get gestational diabetes. While any pregnancy complication is concerning, there's excellent news. Controlling blood glucose can keep you and your baby healthy and stop a difficult delivery. In women with gestational diabetes, blood glucose usually returns to normal soon after delivery. But if you've had gestational diabetes, you've got a better risk of getting type two diabetes. You'll need to be tested for changes in blood sugar more often. Gestational diabetes may be a condition during which your blood glucose levels become high during pregnancy.

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