Search
Search titles only
By:
Search titles only
By:
Home
Forums
New posts
Search forums
What's new
New posts
New profile posts
Latest activity
Members
Current visitors
New profile posts
Search profile posts
Log in
Register
Search
Search titles only
By:
Search titles only
By:
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Install the app
Install
Reply to Thread
Guest, we'd love to know what you think about the forum! Take the
Diabetes Forum Survey 2025 »
Home
Forums
Diabetes Discussion
Gestational Diabetes
GD in first trimester??
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Message
<blockquote data-quote="Cocosilk" data-source="post: 2187667" data-attributes="member: 501623"><p>Every woman becomes insulin resistant during pregnancy as a way to feed the fetus, but normal healthy pregnant women don't end up diabetic. If we have an underlying insulin resistance prior to pregnancy, then the pregnancy can push us over the edge into diabetes. But we were heading for diabetes anyway so it's not really caused by the pregnancy. Although pregnancy does make some other irreversible changes to our bodies so it probably does leave some of us diabetic. But it's probably not just the pregnancy that causes it. Diet, medications, illness, stress could also contribute.</p><p></p><p>The "problem" is that we are not properly warned that our blood sugar is heading for trouble. Your GTT result of 7.7 at 2 hours is practically prediabetic (the cut off starts at 7.8) and spiking to 9.2 at the one our mark, while not all that uncommon, is not all that healthy. Apparently healthy blood sugar sits between 4 and 6 mmol. </p><p></p><p>A cousin of mine who was pregnant this year had her GTT results all in the 4s! Even at the 1 hour spike! She'd been eating gluten free for years prior so had been avoiding some of the common carbs that cause us problems.</p><p></p><p>I've had 3 children in the last 5 years and only had gestational diabetes diagnosed with the 3rd, but in hind sight, I suspect I had it with my 2nd but my obstetrician didn't push me to test for it. My 2nd baby was almost 4kg, where as my my first was 3.1 kg at 42 weeks. And I couldn't stop peeing at the end of my second pregnancy. I thought it was the caffeine but I reckon I had higher sugars we just didn't check.</p><p></p><p>Anyway, I started eating low carb at diagnosis in my 3rd pregnancy and haven't really been able to go back to eating carbs like I was. My follow up GTT was 4.4, 12.1 and 6.5. The 1 hour spike was too high but they only suggested I might have impaired glucose tolerance so I have not been officially diagnosed with diabetes but when I do my own tests at home after eating carbs, I know I'm on the way to diabetes if I continue to eat like that, so I'm sticking with low carb.</p><p></p><p>I know it's annoying if you don't realise you are on the way and suddenly you are already hit with it. For someone like me, if I hadn't found this forum, I would have just gone on eating carbs thinking I was still fine and I wouldn't have realised the extra damage I was doing until it was too late. </p><p></p><p>But lucky you are here!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Cocosilk, post: 2187667, member: 501623"] Every woman becomes insulin resistant during pregnancy as a way to feed the fetus, but normal healthy pregnant women don't end up diabetic. If we have an underlying insulin resistance prior to pregnancy, then the pregnancy can push us over the edge into diabetes. But we were heading for diabetes anyway so it's not really caused by the pregnancy. Although pregnancy does make some other irreversible changes to our bodies so it probably does leave some of us diabetic. But it's probably not just the pregnancy that causes it. Diet, medications, illness, stress could also contribute. The "problem" is that we are not properly warned that our blood sugar is heading for trouble. Your GTT result of 7.7 at 2 hours is practically prediabetic (the cut off starts at 7.8) and spiking to 9.2 at the one our mark, while not all that uncommon, is not all that healthy. Apparently healthy blood sugar sits between 4 and 6 mmol. A cousin of mine who was pregnant this year had her GTT results all in the 4s! Even at the 1 hour spike! She'd been eating gluten free for years prior so had been avoiding some of the common carbs that cause us problems. I've had 3 children in the last 5 years and only had gestational diabetes diagnosed with the 3rd, but in hind sight, I suspect I had it with my 2nd but my obstetrician didn't push me to test for it. My 2nd baby was almost 4kg, where as my my first was 3.1 kg at 42 weeks. And I couldn't stop peeing at the end of my second pregnancy. I thought it was the caffeine but I reckon I had higher sugars we just didn't check. Anyway, I started eating low carb at diagnosis in my 3rd pregnancy and haven't really been able to go back to eating carbs like I was. My follow up GTT was 4.4, 12.1 and 6.5. The 1 hour spike was too high but they only suggested I might have impaired glucose tolerance so I have not been officially diagnosed with diabetes but when I do my own tests at home after eating carbs, I know I'm on the way to diabetes if I continue to eat like that, so I'm sticking with low carb. I know it's annoying if you don't realise you are on the way and suddenly you are already hit with it. For someone like me, if I hadn't found this forum, I would have just gone on eating carbs thinking I was still fine and I wouldn't have realised the extra damage I was doing until it was too late. But lucky you are here! [/QUOTE]
Verification
Post Reply
Home
Forums
Diabetes Discussion
Gestational Diabetes
GD in first trimester??
Top
Bottom
Find support, ask questions and share your experiences. Ad free.
Join the community »
This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you are agreeing to our use of cookies.
Accept
Learn More.…