Gestational Diabetes: The Reality
by Marion Toepke McLean, CNM
© 1993 Midwifery Today, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
[Editor's note: This column originally appeared in
Midwifery Today, Issue 28, Winter 1993.]
When I was new to midwifery in the 1970s, testing for gestational diabetes was
most commonly done after a stillbirth. And then the question was: Why didn't we
learn this sooner?
At that time, a test for gestational diabetes nonintrusive enough for general
screening in pregnancy did not exist. The test required dosing with 100 grams of
glucose after a 12-hour fast, then drawing four blood samples, each an hour apart.
Consequently, we reserved this test for women with risk factors. For the rest of
our clients, we relied on testing the urine for glucose. However, this revealed
only a small number of the total cases.
A few years ago, the American Diabetic Association approved
a simple screening test. After a one-hour fast, 50 grams of glucose are
ingested. One hour later, the blood glucose level is tested. A level greater
than 140 milligrams suggests gestational diabetes. The test provided an
opportunity to improve outcomes, especially since diet and exercise are
adequate treatment in most cases.
Because of the simplicity of the test, I was surprised
when many women resisted the screening. One woman told me she thought
that gestational diabetes is an imaginary disease and brought me a magazine
article to prove her point. But a friend of mine lost her baby to gestational
diabetes in the late '70s, so to me the condition is very real.
She had a normal pregnancy, but was postdates. Her midwives
talked about a nonstress test, but she went into labor before the test
was done. They checked on her several times during a day of prodromal
labor. The fetal heart rate was good, and fetal movements were noted. The
following morning, her contractions came on strong. When the midwives
returned to her house, she was 4 centimeters dilated—but no fetal
heart tones were detected. The consulting obstetrician reported an abnormal
three-hour glucose tolerance test. The diagnosis was gestational diabetes.
What had happened? The pancreas of the diabetic mother
produced insufficient insulin. Consequently, glucose levels, which can
damage many organs, rose in the mother's and baby's bloodstreams. The
baby's young, strong pancreas increased its own insulin production, normalizing
its blood sugar. Levels were stabilized, though at the cost of some fetal
compromise. Then, during labor, the mother's food intake decreased and
no more glucose diffused across into the baby's blood. The baby's own
abnormally high insulin levels quickly metabolized the glucose within
her body, her blood sugar plummeted, she went into shock and died.
Good glucose control in pregnancy prevents the overproduction
of insulin by the baby's pancreas and subsequent episodes of hypoglycemia
in late pregnancy or the neonatal period. My friend has two healthy children
today, the result of carefully monitored pregnancies with dietary control
of gestational diabetes.
But even with screening and monitoring, I had a close call
a couple of years ago. The woman was on a diabetic diet and blood sugar
testing. She always reported normal blood sugars. However, it did seem
like she was gaining a lot of weight, and at term, her baby measured large.
In labor, she dilated normally, up to 9-plus centimeters.
For the next three hours, the lip remained, tapering off to a thin rim.
She stood; she squatted. The baby's baseline heart rate rose a little.
I heard no more accelerations, nor any decelerations; the fetal monitor
confirmed this. The fluid remained clear. When I checked her, the cervix
was so stretchy I could push it back over the head, which was within reach
but not engaged. She had no urge to push. Should I give it a try? I thought
about the big baby, his uncertain status and the stresses that can occur
during a vaginal delivery. I decided against asking her to try to push
the baby on through. My obstetrician consultant was notified of the arrest
of labor. Another period of observation ensued without complete dilatation.
Finally, she underwent cesarean section.
The 11-pound boy was pulled out limp and pale. He was resuscitated,
and an IV was started to correct his very low blood sugar. It was several
days before he was stable without the IV. Why did we have a sick baby
when the blood sugars were normal during pregnancy? The mother confided
in the doctor who was caring for the baby. "She was bingeing,"
he told me. "She followed the diet and recorded her blood sugars
one hour after each meal. They were basically normal. But she didn't report
her bingeing, and she never checked her blood sugar after a binge."
So, we had a sick baby who, with lots of high-tech care, survived to become
a healthy boy.
What is the moral to the story? Gestational diabetes is a reality, and
it can be a serious problem for both mother and baby; but detection and
treatment, along with the mother's cooperation, can prevent problems for
mother and baby. Midwives should monitor their mothers and initiate appropriate
gestational diabetes care for those with the disease.
Marion Toepke McLean is a 1966 graduate of Pacific Lutheran University
School of Nursing in Tacoma, Washington, and a 1974 graduate of Frontier Nursing
Service School of Nurse Midwifery in Hyden, Kentucky. She practices in birth center
and hospital settings in Eugene, Oregon, and lives with her family in the town
of Dexter.
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