Gestational diabetes
- Placental progesterones and hPL produce insulin resistance in the mother, meaning more nutrients diverted to foetus
- If mother is insulin resistant before pregnancy, developing further insulin resistance will raise blood glucose too high and result in gestational diabetes
Complications associated with diabetes in pregnancy
T1 and T2DM
- Congenital malformation
- Prematurity
- Intra-uterine growth retardation (IUGR)
Gestational diabetes
- Macrosomia (>90th centile for size, birth weight >4kg)
- Maternal hypoglycaemia is transferred across the placenta, resulting in foetal hyperglycaemia
- This causes foetal hyperinsulinaemia - insulin is a MAJOR growth factor
- After birth, the baby takes a while to downregulate the hyperinsulinaemia which puts the baby at risk of neonatal hypoglycaemia
- Problems with delivery
- Polyhydramnios
- Interuterine death
Complications in neonate
- Respiratory distress due to immature lungs
- Hypoglyaemia/hypocalcaemia → fits
- CNS defects - anencephaly, spina bifida
- Skeletal abnormalities - caudal regression syndrome
- Genital and GI abnormalities - ureteric duplications
Management of diabetes in pregnancy
T1 and T2DM
- Pre-pregnancy counseling
- Good sugar control pre conception to limit risk of congenital malformation
- Folic acid 5mg (not 400ug as in non-DM pregnancy) at least 3 months prior to conception
- Consider change from tablets to insulin as some T2DM oral medications are contraindicated in pregnacy
- Regular eye checks (10, 20, 30 weeks gestation) to check for any accelerated retinopathy
- Avoid ACEi and probably avoid statins
- For BP use labetalol, nifedipine, methyldopa
- Start aspirin 150mg at 12 weeks (as in all high risk pregnancies)
- Reduces the risk of pregnancy-induced hypertension
T1, T2DM and GDM
- Diabetic diet
- Aim for good blood sugar control
- Pre meal <4-5.5 mmol
- 2 hr post meal <6-6.5 mmol/l
- Use continuous glucose monitoring
- Monitor HbA1c
- Monitor BP
- Maintian glood blood glucose during labour - IV insulin and IV dextrose
Drug treatment needed during pregnancy
T1DM
- Insulin
- May require increased dose
T2DM
- Metformin
- Will probably need insulin later
- If patients are on many drugs for T2DM it is better to convert to insulin prior to pregnancy rather than trying to convert during pregnancy
GDM
- Lifestyle
- Metformin
- May need insulin
Gestational diabetes after birth
- 6 week post natal fasting glucose or GTT to ensure resolution of DM
- If the diabetes persists, patient has T2DM
- <5% of patients with GDM will go on to develop T1DM
- In thin patients with GDM check GAD antibodies
- 50% of patients with GDM will develop T2DM 10-15 years after pregnancy
Prevention of diabetes after GDM
- Keep weight as low as possible
- Healthy diet e.g. low refined sugar, low saturated fat
- Aerobic exercise
- May consider starting on drug treatment at this stage but as evidence for lifestyle changes is stronger this is rarely done
- Annual fasting glucose