Diabetes and Pregnancy — Preconception, During Pregnancy, and Postpartum

Healthy pregnancy with diabetes is absolutely possible. Planning and close monitoring help protect both parent and baby.

What to know

  • Types in pregnancy:
    • Preexisting diabetes: Type 1 or Type 2 present before conception.
    • Gestational diabetes (GDM): first recognized during pregnancy.
  • Why tight control matters:
    • High glucose early raises risk of miscarriage and birth defects; later it increases risks of large baby, birth complications, preeclampsia, and newborn low blood sugar.
  • Typical glucose targets in pregnancy (individualize with your clinician):
    • Fasting/pre‑meal: ≤95 mg/dL (≤5.3 mmol/L)
    • 1‑hour post‑meal: ≤140 mg/dL (≤7.8 mmol/L)
    • 2‑hour post‑meal: ≤120 mg/dL (≤6.7 mmol/L)
  • Insulin is the preferred therapy if meds are needed; many non‑insulin diabetes drugs are paused or switched when trying to conceive or once pregnant.

Take action

  • Preconception (ideal: ≥3 months before trying):
    • Aim for an A1c as close to normal as safely possible (often <6.5%) to reduce birth‑defect risk.
    • Review all meds: switch off teratogenic drugs (e.g., some BP meds, statins) and align diabetes therapy for pregnancy.
    • Start folic acid (at least 400 mcg/day; some need more per clinician).
    • Screen and treat diabetes complications (eyes, kidneys); optimize thyroid if needed.
  • During pregnancy:
    • Nutrition: regular meals/snacks with balanced carbs; include fiber/protein to steady glucose.
    • Monitoring: frequent checks or CGM; share weekly data with your team.
    • Insulin: doses often rise as pregnancy progresses; titrate with clinician.
    • Additional care: aspirin 81 mg from late first trimester for preeclampsia prevention if recommended; monitor BP/weight; schedule anatomy scan and fetal growth checks.
  • Postpartum:
    • Insulin needs drop quickly after delivery—review doses to prevent lows.
    • If GDM: get a 75‑g OGTT at 4–12 weeks postpartum; repeat diabetes screening every 1–3 years.
    • Breastfeeding supports maternal glucose/weight; watch for hypoglycemia if on insulin.

Talk to your obstetric and diabetes team about

  • Safe glucose targets and how/when to adjust insulin.
  • Which non‑insulin meds (if any) are appropriate before/during pregnancy.
  • Aspirin use, BP goals, and eye/kidney monitoring schedule.
  • Birth plan, neonatal hypoglycemia prevention, and postpartum screening.

Quick glossary

  • GDM: gestational diabetes, usually resolves after birth but signals future diabetes risk.
  • Preeclampsia: pregnancy‑related high BP with organ effects; needs close monitoring.
  • OGTT: oral glucose tolerance test used to diagnose GDM and screen postpartum.

Safety note

Persistent high readings, ketones, reduced fetal movement, severe headache/visual changes, or BP spikes need urgent evaluation.

References

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