Gestational Diabetes – Risks for Baby

Gestational Diabetes – Risks for Baby

When you first discover that you have gestational diabetes, most likely you are going to be upset and worried about your baby.  There are risks to the baby when a mother has gestational diabetes, but with careful monitoring and strict control of diet and blood glucose levels these risks can be minimized.

RISKS DURING DELIVERY

The most frequent complication associated with babies whose mothers have had gestational diabetes is how big they become. 

  • The extra glucose in the mother’s system is also shared by the baby and the baby creates extra insulin which in turn produces unrequired fat stores – this is not healthy for the baby and the baby’s size can become dangerously large.
  • A large baby (known as macrosomia) can make labor and delivery more difficult.
  • The baby can get injured during delivery (shoulder injuries are common) and a higher percentage of moms with gestational diabetes having a caesarean section.

RISKS POST DELIVERY

If your diabetes is poorly controlled while you are pregnant, your baby will be born producing more insulin than it should.  Once the baby is born and is no longer exposed to your high glucose levels, he or she will still be producing insulin at the same rate they were in the womb.  This can cause your baby’s own blood sugar level to drop dangerously low, this condition is called hypoglycaemia.

RISKS FOR LIFETIME

When a baby is born with high insulin levels the effects are long-lasting.  The baby will grow up and be at a higher than normal of developing type 2 diabetes for the rest of its life.  These same babies may also suffer from childhood obesity because of the additional fat stores that were creating during pregnancy.  These risks give moms the incentive and drive to stick with the diabetic diet and exercise regime – it is the way to give your baby the best start.

Use Control D regularly to check your blood glucose levels and your baby’s neonatal blood glucose levels to manage Diabetes.

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