Gestational diabetes is a disorder that causes elevated blood sugar levels during pregnancy. It affects up to 10% of pregnant women in the world each year. It affects women who are pregnant but have never been diagnosed with diabetes. Gestational diabetes is divided into two categories. Diet and exercise can help women with class A1 manage their condition. Those with A2 diabetes must use insulin or other drugs. In contrast to type 1 diabetes, gestational diabetes usually develops too late in pregnancy to cause birth defects. Birth defects are more common in the first trimester of pregnancy (before the 13th week). GDM problems are typically controllable and avoidable. The key to prevention is to keep blood sugar levels under strict control as soon as diabetes is diagnosed.
Title : Exercise: The panacea for overconsumption of carbohydrate.
Charles P Lambert PhD, Lambert Relentless R & D, LLC, United States
Title : Magnesium supplementation as potential means to reduce thrombotic risk in type 1 diabetes
Alan J Stewart, University of St. Andrews, United Kingdom
Title : Incorporation of dietary fibres from selected vegetation for diabesity market
Wan Rosli Wan Ishak, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Malaysia
Title : Navigating obesity, diabetes, and behavior change: A case study of a successful physician-patient partnership
Gretchen Holmes, Memorial Hospital at Gulfport, United States
Title : Diabetic retinopathy and GDM in hispanic pregnant women with toxoplasma gondii
Maureen Groer, University of Tennessee Knoxville, United States
Title : Do the STAP test --- Prevent the diabetes
Madhu S Malo, Diabetic Association of Bangladesh, United States