The effect of diabetes in pregnancy

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2018-05-05

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

faculty of Basic Medical Science - Libyan International Medical University

Abstract

Diabetes in pregnancy is unique because of the diversity of problems that can affect the embryo/fetus . Considerable effort has been devoted to understanding the basic developmental biology from observing young embryos. Maternal glucose control has been identified as an important event. The preponderance of evidence indicates that rigid glucose control will minimize the incidence of anomalies incurred before 9 weeks of pregnancy. Later events are related to fetal hyperinsulinemia. These include fetal macrosomia, respiratory distress syndrome, neonatal hypoglycemia, neonatal hypocalcemia, and neonatal obesity . Control of maternal metabolism can have a significant impact on each of the above. Finally, the long-term effects of maternal diabetes are as diverse as the pathogenetic events during pregnancy. Surprisingly, there is a significant transmission rate of 2% of type I diabetes if the mother has insulin-dependent diabetic mother, whereas the rate is 6% for these problems in three studies

Description

For pregnant women with diabetes mellitus some particular challenges for both mother and child. If the woman has diabetes as an intercurrent disease in pregnancy, it can cause early labor, birth defects, and very large babies. Planning in advance is emphasized if one wants to have a baby and has type 1 diabetes mellitus or type 2 diabetes mellitus. Pregnancy management for diabetics needs stringent blood glucose control even in advance of having pregnancy

Keywords

Citation

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Creative Commons license

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 3.0 United States