Gestational Diabetes Mellitus
Gestational Diabetes Mellitus
Gestational Diabetes Mellitus
• Early screening
• Offer women who had gestational diabetes in
a previous pregnancy:
• Early self-monitoring of blood glucose or
75 g 2-hr OGTT as soon as possible after •
booking (whether in first/second trimester),
and further 75 g 2-hr OGTT at 24–28 weeks if
results of first OGTT are normal
OGTT:At 24–28 weeks in the presence
of the following risk factors
• BMI >30 kg/m2 (
• Previous macrosomic baby ≥4.5 kg
• Previous gestational diabetes
• First degree relative with type 1 or
type 2 diabetes
• Women on long-term antipsychotic
medications
• Family origin with a high prevalence
of diabetes – south Asian
(specifically country of family origin:
India, Pakistan middle Eastern :Saudi
Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Iraq,
Jordan, Syria, Oman, Qatar, Kuwait,
Lebanon or Egypt)
OGTT
• Previous unexplained stillbirth
• Glycosuria ( 1 episode of 2+ , 2
episodes of 1+)
• Polyhydramnios in the current
pregnancy.
• Macrosomia in the current
pregnancy.
• Age > 35years.
• >3 spontaneous abortions in
the 1st or 2nd trimester.
Management of woman diagnosed
GDM
Explain to women with gestational diabetes:
• about the implications (both short and long
term) of the diagnosis for her and her baby
• that good blood glucose control throughout
pregnancy will reduce the risk of fetal
&maternal Complications.
Risks of GDM to women and babies include:
• Birth trauma (to mother and baby)
• Induction of labour or caesarean section
• Pre-eclampsia,
• In addition, there are long-term effects associated
with GDM pregnancies such as an increased
maternal risk of developing metabolic syndrome
and Type 2 diabetes later in life.
• Of the women who develop GDM, 20% to 50%
will develop overt diabetes in the next 5 to 10
years.
Risks of GDM to women and babies include:
24
Control of blood glucose
• Offer addition of insulin to the
treatments of changes in diet, exercise
and metformin for women with
gestational diabetes if blood glucose
targets are not met.
• Offer immediate treatment with
insulin, with or without metformin, as
well as changes in diet and exercise, to
women with gestational diabetes who
have a fasting plasma glucose level of
7.0mmol/litre or above at diagnosis.
25
Consider immediate treatment
with insulin, with or without
metformin, as well as changes in
diet and exercise, for women with
gestational diabetes who have a
fasting plasma glucose level of
between 6.0 and 6.9 mmol/litre if
there are complications such as
macrosomia or hydramnios
Consider glibenclamide for women
with gestational diabetes:
in whom blood glucose targets are
not achieved with metformin but
who decline
insulin therapy or who cannot
tolerate metformin. [new 2015]
Oral Hypoglycemic Agents
• The American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists (2013) acknowledges that
• both glyburide and metformin are
appropriate, as is insulin, for first-line glycemic
control in women with gestational diabetes.
• Because long-term outcomes have not
been studied, the committee
recommends appropriate counseling
when hypoglycemic agents are used.
Insulin Management
What an
amazing gift
to help
people, not
just yourself