This patient support community is for questions related to juvenile diabetes including
Celiac disease,
depression, diabetic complications, hyperglycemia /
diabetic keto-acidosis,
hypoglycemia, islet cell transplantation,
nutrition, parenting a diabetic child, pregnancy, pump therapy, school issues, and teens with
diabetes.
Stay with the control of your blood sugars it can only help you and her. Good luck with the pregnancy daughters are great!
So I believe that you have little danger after the baby is born if your case follows the usual pattern. Through my work with the Juvenile Diabetes Online Support Team, I have heard from one woman who kept her diabetic condition after pregnancy, but she turned out to be a type 1 autoimmune diabetic and not a type 2 insulin-resistant diabetic.
The fact that you are currently able to keep your glucose levels in the normal range will protect you and your baby. It isn't the diagnosis of diabetes that causes any development problems or that grows large babies, but it is diabetes that is not WELL-CONTROLLED. There is a big difference between the two! Being diabetic does not automatically make your baby large. Having high glucose levels does that. So if you work closely with your doctor to keep those glucose levels as normal as possible, you need not fear having a large baby or the baby having developmental problems. If, as the pregnancy progresses, you notice that your glucose levels are rising, then you should call your doctor and work with him to lower those levels. You and your baby will probably be fine as long as you work aggressively to stay in control of the glucose levels.
I am proof of what I write. During my first pregnancy, I was not in great control of my glucose levels (this was in my pre-education-about-diabetes days) and the baby was 9 pounds large. During the second pregnancy, I worked with a team of doctors who were doing research in all things diabetic, and they used me as a test case to see what would happen when I was deliberately slightly over-dosed on insulin during the pregnancy (I don't recommend this, by the way). The result in my case was a baby who was small, under 7 pounds. The direct result of high or low glucose levels was certainly proven. So keep taking good care of yourself, and I wish you a very healthy baby!