In most women, Diabetes goes away after the baby is born and placenta delivered. The extra hormones in your body are what causes the insulin resistance. Once you aren't pregnant anymore and the hormones go away, your body goes back to normal insulin production. That is the case for most women, but in some women diabetes continues after pregnancy. It is also common for women who have had gestational diabetes to develop Type 2 diabetes later on in life. As always, it is smart to maintain a diabetic diet (low carb/low sugar).
The types of Diabetes are type 1 with sub type -brittle diabetes, type 2 and juvenile diabetes, type 3 (under research) , and Gestational diabetes during pregnancy.
If mother had gestational diabetes when she was pregnant, then chances of having diabetes for a child is low. But gestational mother have more chances to have diabetes type 2. If this happens then the child diabetes risk is increased.If father have type 1 diabetes, then the child has some very low risk of having type 1 diabetes (autoimmune disorder). If father had type 2 diabetes then diabetes risk for the child is higher as compared to the mother with type 2 diabetes.
Yes. Gestational diabetes is more common in those with a history of diabetes or a genetic propensity for diabetes. Gestational diabetes is diagnosed between week 24-28 after the glucose screening test.
Diabetes Diabetes in pregnancy is known as Gestational Diabetes
Type 1, Type 2, MODY, LADA, Gestational, Neonatal, and more.
Type 1 diabetes results from autoimmune destruction of insulin producing beta cells of the pancreas. On the other hand, type 2 diabetes is characterized by high blood glucose in the context of insulin resistance.
There are primarily three types of diabetes: Type 1, Type 2, and gestational diabetes. Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune condition where the body does not produce insulin, while Type 2 diabetes is characterized by insulin resistance and often linked to lifestyle factors. Gestational diabetes occurs during pregnancy and typically resolves after childbirth. Additionally, there are other less common types, such as monogenic diabetes and secondary diabetes, but the main focus is usually on the first three.
The cause of Type 1 Diabetes is unclear but Type 2 Diabetes comes from an unhealthy lifestyle. Pregnant women may also have a form known as Gestational Diabetes that occurs due to their condition.
Yes, there are 4 different types of diabetes they are all different. There is: type 1 diabetes, type 2 diabetes, gestational diabetes, and diabetes insipidus. Type 1 diabetes is seen mostly in children, this is when the pancreas secretes no insulin. Type 2 is when the pancreas secretes insulin, it is just not enough. Gestational is similar to type 2 but only occurs while a woman is pregnant. Diabetes insipidus is different it has nothing to do with blood sugar, although it may cause excessive. In diabetes insipidus the body has a problem secreting the ADH (antidiuretic hormone) this causes a person to become thirsty all the time and want to urinate frequently. A person with this is at risk for dehydration.
type a, type b There are 3 types of diabetes: Type 1 (when the body stops producing insulin completely), Type 2 (body produces some insulin, but not enough to function properly), and Gestational (occurs in pregnant women and usually disappears after birth).
Diabetes type 2 has insulin resistance, while type 1 is basically an autoimmune disease where your body attacks your pancreas.
Type 1 diabetes is caused by a loss of insulin production in the beta cell of the pancreas. The loss of insulin production occurs because something in the person's immune system triggers it to target those cells, and prevent further insulin production. There is not a known relationship between Type 1 diabetes in children and maternal body weight or history of gestational diabetes. The risk of developing Type 1 diabetes, in a child without a family history of the disease, is 2-5%, and varies with age.