Well firstly congratulations on getting your levels down so quickly and during pregnancy too. Getting a diagnosis is a lot to take in at the best of times, but being pregnant means it’s even more important to get it under control quickly, and you have.
One thing about pregnancy for diabetics (regardless of type) is that everything changes all the time. The mix of hormones and a growing baby mean that insulin requirements (either made by you or injected) change constantly. That might mean you end up on insulin, it might not. Keep testing, and make sure you stay close to your health team so that the necessary changes can be made swiftly. It sounds like you’ve been doing a great job so far, so just keep going!
Hello and I am sorry you got a bit of a shock of a diagnosis and understandably want to know where you stand and if you will need to continue taking insulin post pregnancy?
As your antibody and c peptide tests were negative then it is likely you are a gestational diabetic meaning your baby is growing fast and your body is making you extremely insulin resistant in order to fuel your baby's growth. The issue as you've doubtless been told is that this might make the baby very big and cause problems for delivery.
I am so glad you have an fsl becaue it makes checking so much easier and you can work out which meals will make you higher.
Once the pregnancy hormones dissapate it is likely your bgs will go back to normal but there's no guarantee so that is probaly why they are being cagey. If it is type 2 gestational diabetes then you should be aware that this shows that you are at raisk for developing t2 later on so it might be a good time to change your diet and you will get some good ideas here. If it turns out those earlier tests were wrong and you need to take insulin then your blood sugars will let you know and again then it isnt the end of the world but as this seems unlikely I would cross that bridge when you need to.
I really hope you are enjoying this pregnancy as much as possible and am glad that they caught the blood sugar problem and that you can give you and your baby the best possible pregnancy and delivery just by testing and eating things that don't make you go high for too long.
I've had 3 with full blown type 1 so I get how anxiety provoking a medicalised pregnancy can be but its better that you know.
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