{"meta":{"status":200,"messages":[],"pagination":{"max":1,"offset":0,"count":1,"total":1,"pageNum":1,"totalPages":1,"sort":null,"currentUrl":"https://api.digitalmedia.hhs.gov/api/v2/resources/media.json?offset=0&max=1&ignoreHiddenMedia=1&format=json&id=15737&newUrlBase=http://www.cdc.gov/pregnancy","nextUrl":null,"previousUrl":null}},"results":[{"content":"
\nDiabetes can cause problems during pregnancy for women and their developing babies. Poor control of diabetes during pregnancy increases the chances for birth defects and other problems for the baby. It can also cause serious complications for the woman. Proper health care before and during pregnancy can help prevent birth defects and other health problems.
\nDiabetes is a condition in which the body cannot use the sugars and starches (carbohydrates) it takes in as food to make energy. The body either makes no insulin or too little insulin or cannot use the insulin it makes to change those sugars and starches into energy. As a result, extra sugar builds up in the blood.
\nThe three most common types of diabetes are:
\nThe pancreas makes no insulin or so little insulin that the body can\u2019t use blood sugar for energy. Type 1 diabetes must be controlled with daily insulin.
\nLearn more about type 1 diabetes and pregnancy \u00bb
\nThe body either makes too little insulin or can\u2019t use the insulin it makes to use blood sugar for energy. Sometimes type 2 diabetes can be controlled through eating a proper diet and exercising regularly. Many people with type 2 diabetes have to take diabetes pills, insulin, or both.
\nLearn more about type 2 diabetes and pregnancy \u00bb
\nThis is a type of diabetes that is first seen in a pregnant woman who did not have diabetes before she was pregnant. Often gestational diabetes can be controlled through eating a healthy diet and exercising regularly. Sometimes a woman with gestational diabetes must also take insulin. Every year, 2% to 10% of pregnancies in the United States are affected by gestational diabetes.
\nFor most women with gestational diabetes, the diabetes goes away soon after delivery. When it does not go away, the diabetes is called type 2 diabetes. Even if the diabetes does go away after the baby is born, half of all women who had gestational diabetes develop type 2 diabetes later. It\u2019s important for a woman who has had gestational diabetes to continue to exercise and eat a healthy diet after pregnancy to prevent or delay getting type 2 diabetes. She should also remind her doctor to check her blood sugar every 1 to 3 years.
\nLearn more about gestational diabetes and pregnancy \u00bb
\nGestational diabetes occurs when your body can\u2019t make enough insulin during your pregnancy. Insulin is a hormone made by your pancreas that acts like a key to let blood sugar into the cells in your body for use as energy. Learn more about Causes of Gestational Diabetes
\nSome women are at greater risk for developing diabetes during pregnancy. Learn more about risk factors associated with diabetes during pregnancy
\n