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Gestational Diabetes Mellitus

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Title: Gestational Diabetes Mellitus


1
Gestational Diabetes Mellitus
  • Helping Your ClientMake Healthy Lifestyle
    Choices

2
Introduction
  • Following appropriate screening guidelines,
    understanding causation and associated
    conditions, and effectively managing the client
    with GDM can improve both short term and long
    term health conditions associated with GDM

3
Definitions
  • Gestational Diabetes (GDM)
  • Insulin Resistance (IR)
  • Glycemic Index (GI)
  • Syndrome X
  • Body Mass Index (BMI)

4
Gestational Diabetes (GDM)
  • A carbohydrate intolerance of varying degrees and
    severity with onset or first recognition during
    pregnancy with a probable resolution after the
    end of pregnancy. Diabetes, glucose intolerance
    or insulin resistance may have existed before the
    pregnancy. GDM is not the same as Type 1 or Type
    2 Diabetes

5
Insulin Resistance (IR)
  • Insulin resistance is the resistance of the
    skeletal muscles and adipose to the affects of
    insulin. The pancreas produces more insulin, and
    over time cells become more and more resistant to
    the actions of insulin. As blood sugars and
    insulin increase, eventually the pancreas fails
    to produce enough insulin and diabetes occurs.

6
Glycemic Index (GI)
  • The glycemic index ranks foods on how they affect
    our blood sugar levels. This index measures how
    quickly an individual's blood sugar increases in
    the two or three hours after eating.
  • http//www.mendosa.com/gi.htm

7
Factors That Affect the GI
  • The GI of a food is influenced by the
    characteristics of the food or meal.
  • Processing, preparation, storage, physical form,
    and ripeness of foods affect the GI.
  • The GI varies within the same individual and
    between individuals.

8
Value of the GI
  • Each client can determine how she reacts to
    certain foods by monitoring food intake and
    postprandial blood glucose levels
  • The primary goal of GDM management is to achieve
    and maintain euglycemia throughout pregnancy to
    improve the outcomes for both mother and fetus

9
Syndrome X
  • The loss of responsiveness of the body to insulin
    is associated with a clustering of
    cardiovascular risk factors that includes
    abdominal obesity, hypertension, dyslipidemia,
    glucose intolerance and hyperinsulinemia.
  • This association is referred to as the insulin
    resistance syndrome, which is also known as
    Syndrome X.

10
Body Mass Index (BMI)
  • A commonly used measure to differentiate
    underweight, normal weight, overweight and
    obesity. Obtained by dividing the weight of the
    subject (in kilos) by the square of his (her)
    height in meters.
  • A BMI of approximately 25 kg/m2 corresponds to
    about 10 percent over ideal body weight.
  • http//www.americanheart.org/Heart_and_Stroke_A_Z_
    Guide/body.html

11
Body Mass Index Definitions
12
Body Mass Index and Recommended Weigh Gain
13
How These Conditions Are Related
  • Women with a history of GDM are metabolically
    vulnerable with insufficient ß-cell reserve, and
    many are insulin resistant. Approximately 50 of
    women who are diagnosed with gestational diabetes
    during pregnancy will develop it in future
    pregnancies, and are at a much greater risk of
    developing type 2 diabetes in later life. The
    insulin resistance is the factor that exists in
    the woman with GDM. The aim of the lifestyle
    changes to be discussed here are to decrease
    insulin resistance.

14
Pregnancy Pathophysiology
  • Insulin resistance occurs because the hormonal
    changes associated with pregnancy partially block
    the effects of insulin.
  • Insulin resistance causes glucose to be shunted
    from the mother to the fetus to facilitate fetal
    growth and development.

15
Pregnancy Pathophysiology
  • During the third trimester of pregnancy, insulin
    resistance increases by 50.
  • Maternal pancreatic beta cells increase insulin
    secretion almost threefold to compensate for
    increased insulin resistance.

16
Pregnancy Pathophysiology
  • The subsequent increase in insulin secretion
    causes the maternal glucose levels to increase
    80 of the blood levels of non-pregnant women
  • If the mothers pancreas is unable to produce
    sufficient insulin to overcome insulin
    resistance, maternal glucose levels increase and
    GDM occurs

17
Pregnancy Pathophysiology
  • GDM complicates pregnancy by further increasing
    insulin resistance
  • GDM disappears after pregnancy because the
    hormonal changes that caused insulin resistance
    are no longer present
  • Useful physiologic process out of balance

18
Action Plan for Prevention
  • Approximately 60 to 80 of the women with GDM
    are obese and experience insulin resistance
    associated with both obesity and GDM.
  • A decrease in caloric intake and caloric
    redistribution of foods may help decrease
    abnormally high blood glucose levels by improving
    target-organ insulin sensitivity.

19
Laboratory Screening for GDM
  • Demographics
  • Who to Screen
  • Screening

20
Demographics of GDM
  • Most common medical complication of pregnancy
  • Occurs in 4 of all pregnancies (all ethnicities)
  • Changes in diagnostic criteria will increase
    incidence of this metabolic complication
    (involves a recognition of a lower level of blood
    glucose)

21
Who Should Be Screened
  • Women over 25
  • Women who are obese
  • Women with a family history of diabetes
  • Women of ethnic/racial high risk groups
  • Women who have had a gt9 baby

22
Value of Screening During the Current Pregnancy
  • Increased screening, identification and treatment
    can decrease the morbidity and mortality of GDM
  • Decreased macrosomia, cesarean birth and birth
    trauma due to a gt 4000g infant
  • Decreased neonatal hypoglycemia, hypocalcaemia,
    hyperbilirubinemia, polycythemia
  • Identify women at future risk for diabetes and
    those with insulin resistance

23
Routine Screening (ACOG,1994)
24
Screening and Diagnosis of GDM(ACOG, 1994)
  • Nearly 25 of women will have a 1hr GTT, and
    will need a 3 hour GTT.
  • A GTT is considered diagnostic for GDM when 2 or
    more values are met or exceeded.

25
Determination of GDM (ACOG, 1994)
26
Retesting (32-34 Weeks) When?
  • Negative initial test, risk factors present
  • Obesity
  • gt33 years of age
  • Positive 1 hour screen followed by a negative
    OGGT
  • 3/4 glucosuria

27
Factors That Influence the Development of Type 2
Diabetes Mellitus
28
Factors That Influence the Development of Type 2
Diabetes Mellitus
29
Factors That Influence the Development of Type 2
Diabetes Mellitus
30
Teachable Moments
  • Women with GDM and/or IR present an ideal group
    for diabetes prevention and education because
    they are teachable and usually more motivated to
    change behaviors and improve their long range
    health and the health of their families.

31
Teachable Moments
  • Seen as a positive thing, the diagnosis of GDM
    during pregnancy identifies these women at risk
    and this awareness can encourage healthy
    lifestyle changes

32
Management of GDM During Pregnancy and Post Partum
  • Healthy food Choices
  • Encouraging Lifestyle changes
  • Education and support
  • Laboratory follow-up
  • Post Partum and Beyond
  • Teachable Moments

33
Healthy Food Choices
  • Various Options
  • Medical Nutritional Therapy
  • Nutritional Prescription

34
Making Healthy Food Choices
  • What are healthy choices ?
  • Goals of medical nutrition therapy respect the
    needs of the pregnant woman and her developing
    fetus
  • Food combination options encourage maternal
    euglycemia

35
What Are Healthy Choices ?
  • Nutritional management is understudied, with no
    randomized control studies looking specifically
    at optimal medical nutrition for GDM, lean or
    obese.

36
What Are Healthy Choices ?
  • Distribution of Macronutrients
  • Optimal distribution of calories is unknown
    (little consensus, wide variability, not adequate
    research).

37
What Are Healthy Choices ?
  • The ideal caloric recommendations for GDM are
    unknown or have not been well studied. Factors
    such as maternal height, pregravid wt, maternal
    age, physical activity and smoking all need to be
    considered.

38
What Are Healthy Choices ?
  • The majority of women should eat 2200-2400
    calories. Moderate calorie restrictions (to
    1800) have been shown to reduce macrosomia and
    its associated morbidity and maternal ketonuria

39
Goals of Medical Nutrition Therapy
40
Goals of Medical Nutrition Therapy
41
Goal of Medical Nutrition Therapy
  • Deborah Thomas-Dobersen suggests three reasonable
    options which seem to accomplish this goal

42
Option ITraditional Food Pyramid
  • High Carb/low fat 55 carbohydrate,
  • 25 protein,
  • 20 fat

Http//www.mjbovo.Com/PregWt.Html
43
Option II Balanced
  • Discuss with your client the effect of high GI
    carb foods versus low GI-carb foods


35-40 carbohydrates,
20--25 protein
35-40 fat
44
Option III Low Glycemic Carbohydrates
  • More Protein
  • Low GI Carbs
  • Appropriate Fats

http//www.enteract.com/jldavid/lowcarb/pyramid.h
tml
45
Nutritional Prescription
  • For GDM, the nutritional prescription should
    satisfy the minimum requirements for pregnant
    women
  • Minimal caloric intake for those with GDM is
    debated
  • There is little risk of ketonuria when diets
    provide 25kcal/kg, which is based on the womans
    actual body weight

46
Nutritional Recommendations
  • Distribution of total calories is
  • 35-45 carbohydrates
  • 20-25 protein
  • 35-40 fat

Tolstoi Jusmovich
47
ADA Clinical Guidelines
  • Restriction of carbohydrates to 3540 of
    calories has been shown to decrease maternal
    glucose levels and improve maternal and fetal
    outcomes
  • American Diabetes AssociationClinical Practice
    Recommendations 2001

48
Limiting Carbohydrate Intake
  • When starchy carbohydrate intake is limited,
    postparandial blood glucose levels are lower
    compared with diets higher in carbohydrate
    content.

49
Factors That Affect Blood Glucose Levels
  • Stress physical and psychological
  • Time of day
  • Exercise
  • Amount of carbohydrate consumed
  • Lifestyle choices such as smoking

50
Goals of Nutritional Therapy
  • Encourage euglycemia
  • Prevent Ketosis
  • Decrease maternal hyperglycemia

51
Making Healthy Lifestyle Choices
  • Modifying Eating Behavior
  • Daily Exercise
  • Lifestyle Management

52
Healthy Lifestyle Choices
  • "Lifestyle changeis the central determinant of
    whether people will lose weight and maintain
    loss' Kelly D. Brownell.
  • Lifestyle management is the systematic change of
    behavior and thinking patterns that
    affect weight.

53
Healthy Lifestyle Choices
  • Brownell cites helping with the modification of
    eating behavior, physical activity, and a change
    in attitude, goals and emotions as specific ways
    practitioners can help women make these lifestyle
    changes.

54
Healthy Lifestyle Choices
  • Practitioners can help individuals acquire skills
    to change the ways they think and act that affect
    their eating habits.

55
Healthy Lifestyle Choices
  • Simply giving the advice to 'eat better' and
    'exercise more' will work in only a small handful
    of patients. Health professionals commonly ask
    their clients to lose weight without providing
    the ways to ensure success. "We must give
    patients the best chance of success."

56
Exercise !
  • Moderate regular exercise such as walking,
    cycling or swimming are excellent forms of
    exercise for pregnant women. Keeping
    well-hydrated and well-nourished is essential

57
Exercises to Encourage
  • Brisk walking, cycling and swimming are often
    done safely by pregnant women. Staying balanced
    and avoiding falls is important

58
Benefits of Exercise
  • Exercising for 15-20 minutes after a meal may
    help to keep blood glucose levels within the
    target range for women with GDM.
  • Individualized programs can start with 20
    minutes/day, gradually increasing to 45-60
    minutes/day.

59
Education and Support
  • Food Journals
  • Ongoing Support
  • Ongoing Education

60
Food Journals
  • Provide a tool for ongoing evaluation and
    discussion, and increasing your clients awareness
    of the effects specific foods and activities.

61
Food Journals
  • Keeping a record of all foods and beverages
    consumed can motivate women to alter caloric
    intake and learn the affect of specific foods and
    activates on blood sugar.

62
Viewpoints About Food Journals
  • Journals reinforce the expectation of
    improvement.
  • Approach your clients food choices carefully, as
    she needs affirmation, not criticism for long
    term support. Encourage the food record to be a
    learning tool, not a rigid diet to follow.

63
Supportive Communities
  • Have available resources of support groups in
    your community that can be helpful for your
    client.
  • Be familiar with the many on line resources
    available for women who are gestational
    diabetics, or who want to make these lifestyle
    changes.

64
Ongoing Education
  • Keep current with available educational resources
    available that might be helpful for your client.
  • Involve your client in her own learning as much
    as possible.
  • Take the time to explain her progress to her.

65
Laboratory Follow-up
  • Self-monitoring Blood Glucose
  • Checking for Ketonuria
  • FBS and 2 Hour PP

66
Self-monitoring of Blood Glucose (SMBG)
  • SMBG can improve outcomes in pregnancies by early
    recognition of abnormal blood sugar levels. New
    meters and lancing devices make the process of
    obtaining blood almost painless.
  • SMBG empowers women with GDM to become active
    participants in their care. Women can readily see
    the impact of their choices.

67
SMBG
  • Self-monitoring will give women immediate
    feedback about portion size, particular foods
    that cause hyperglycemia, and the impact of
    exercise on blood sugar
  • Newer and more appealing tools will improve
    clients willingness to monitor their blood glucose

68
SMBG Promotes Empowerment
  • Studies have shown that SMBG helps clients follow
    goals of treatment and learn about the impact of
    specific food and activity choices.
  • Clients are more likely to believe the advice
    they receive when they can see high blood glucose
    levels 2 hours after eating, or see a level
    decrease after walking.

69
Acceptable SMBG Values
  • Postprandial glucose levels are more closely
    related to fetal risks than fasting levels.
    Taking a fasting level and then 1 or 2 hour
    postprandial levels are recommended.
  • FPG lt110mg/dl Normal Fasting glucose.
  • 2hr PG lt 140 Normal 2hr glucose tolerance.

70
Checking for Ketonuria
  • Clients who are following a hypocaloric or
    carbohydrate restricted diet might benefit from
    testing ketones before breakfast.
  • The persistence of small to moderate ketones can
    signal inadequate calories, a misunderstanding of
    the meal plan, or a woman secretly restricting
    food to avoid the addition of insulin.

71
Checking for Ketones
  • Recommended for women on a hypo caloric or
    carbohydrate restricted diet.
  • Small to moderate ketones can signal inadequate
    calories or identify women who are restricting
    food.

72
FBS and 2 Hour PP
  • Considered the follow-up test to determine
    effectiveness of management
  • HgA1c also might provide insights to ongoing
    blood glucose levels

73
Blood Glucose Values for Pregnancy
Normal blood glucose range 60-120 mg/dl
Rubin, A. L. Diabetes for Dummies, p 95
74
Post Partum and Beyond
  • Breastfeeding
  • Follow-up Labs
  • Follow-up Education
  • Healthy Lifestyle Choices

75
Breastfeeding
  • Extensive research documents the superiority of
    human milk for infant feeding
  • Breastfeeding in the postpartum period is
    associated with better maternal weight loss,
    improved fasting blood glucose levels, glucose
    tolerance and lipid levels

76
Postpartum and Beyond
  • Follow-up labs at 6-12 week postpartum a 75g GTT
    can help determine a woman's risk of developing
    diabetes.
  • Subsequent annual screening for diabetes and CV
    risk factors (Lipid profile).
  • Discuss prevention of a diabetic pregnancy in
    subsequent pregnancies.

77
Postpartum Fasting and 2 Hour Screening and
Diagnosis Criteria
78
Additional Definitions
  • FPG Fasting Plasma Glucose.
  • IFG Impaired fasting glycemia a fasting glucose
    concentration lower than those required to
    diagnose diabetes but higher than the 'normal'
    reference range.

79
Additional Definitions
  • IGT Impaired Glucose Tolerance a stage in the
    natural history if disordered carbohydrate
    metabolism. This marker serves as an indicator or
    marker along with the other elements of Metabolic
    Syndrome. Individuals with IGT manifest glucose
    intolerance only when challenged with an oral
    glucose load.

80
Significance of GDM and Insulin Resistance Post
Partum
  • Up to 60 of women will develop type 2 diabetes
    during their lifetime
  • Recurrence rate in subsequent pregnancies is up
    to 65

81
Postpartum Monitoring
  • A FBG gt125 mg/dl on two occasions denotes DM
  • A FPG of 110-125 mg/dl impaired fasting glucose
  • 2HR PG 140-199 Impaired FBG
  • A level gt200mg/dl DM

82
Post Partum and Beyond
  • "All women with GDM history should be counseled
    on the modifiable risk factors, such as the
    importance of healthy weight maintenance and
    daily exercise and the risk of postpartum weight
    gain to the development of subsequent GDM and
    type 2 diabetes.

83
Post Partum and Beyond
  • Women should receive medical nutrition therapy to
    decrease dietary fat. If they can achieve a 10-lb
    weight loss postpartum, they can decrease the
    risk of subsequent diabetes by one-half"
  • Deborah Thomas-Doberson

84
A Woman With a History of GDM
  • Is metabolically vulnerable with insufficient
    ß-cell reserve, and many are insulin resistant
  • If type 2 diabetes is delayed by 6 years the risk
    of developing sight-threatening retinopathy would
    be reduced by 65

85
Women With a History of GDM
  • Often are not followed intensively for modifiable
    lifestyle changes that may prevent type 2
    diabetes
  • Need to be identified before pregnancy because,
    the incidence of fetal structural anomalies
    increases during the first 2 months of gestation

86
Recommendations Postpartum
  • All women with a history of GDM should be
    screened annually for diabetes and heart disease
    risk factors.

87
Significance of GDM and Insulin Resistance Post
Partum
  • Offspring of women with GDM have an increased
    risk for developing obesity and glucose
    intolerance as they grow and mature.

88
Teachable Moments
  • Preconception
  • Postpartum
  • Previous Pregnancy

89
Preconception Counseling
  • Strict glucose control greatly reduces the
    incidence of structural defects which occur in
    the first two months of gestation
  • Preconception counseling and monitoring becomes a
    major objective in the care of these women

90
Postpartum
  • Women with a history of GDM present an ideal
    group for diabetes prevention, not only in
    preventing diabetes in themselves, bur for their
    family, for whom they are often the gatekeepers
    for nutrition and exercise.
  • Pregnancy a teachable moment when women are
    usually very focused on their own health and the
    health of their baby.

91
The Value of ExerciseContinues !
92
Dietary Recommendations
  • A high dietary fat intake between pregnancies can
    be a predictor for the recurrence of GDM.
  • A diet with a high glycemic index and low fiber
    count appears to increase the relative risk of
    developing type 2 diabetes.

93
Modifiable Nutritional and Non-nutritional
Factors for Diabetes Prevention
94
Modifiable Nutritional and Non-nutritional
Factors for Diabetes Prevention.
Source Deborah Thomas-Doersen
95
Concerns and Questions
  • Is lowering carbs better than initiating insulin?
  • Will increasing fat increase CV risk?
  • How can a woman be encouraged to make food
    choices, and how rigid must she be?
  • Does a reduction to 35 total carbs lead to
    nutrient deficiencies ?

96
In Conclusion
  • Strive for an accurate diagnosis and
    identification of the woman with IR and GDM
  • Consult and refer as indicated should lab
    values persist outside of the range of euglycemia

97
In Conclusion
  • Help your client establish Healthy Lifestyle
    Changes in Pregnancy
  • Encourage continuing Healthy Lifestyle Choices
    Postpartum
  • Offer ongoing support and follow-up

98
Long Term Goals of Management
  • Primary prevention of type 2 diabetes
  • Improvement of existing IR or obesity
  • Permanent lifestyle changes
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