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Causes and Types
Types of Diabetes Mellitus
Causes and Types of Diabetes

Diabetes Gestational Glucose Test


 A form of hyperglycemia, gestational diabetes will create insulin resistance, which results in accelerated blood glucose levels. Most people over the age of 45, as well as pregnant women within their 24th to 28th week of pregnancy might be the subjects for a doctor’s diabetes gestational glucose test.

Also sometimes referred to as an OGTT (oral glucose tolerance test) or a fasting “challenge,” a diabetes gestational glucose test will involve fasting for eight hours and then taking a blood glucose reading before and after ingesting a small amount of water with glucose dissolved in it. The diabetes gestational glucose test is called a challenge because your body is “challenged” to absorb the glucose, and trained medical teams will closely monitor the test’s effects and results, looking for abnormalities that would indicate either onset or pre-diabetes. If a preliminary diabetes gestational glucose test shows an indication of being at risk for gestational or other forms of diabetes, you will be asked to perform the diabetes gestational glucose test on another day to confirm the results before you are diagnosed with any specific condition.

A diabetes gestational glucose test may be just one of a series of tests that a medical staff will perform to determine your risk for diabetes, but it is viewed by most professionals to be a highly accurate evaluation of how your blood deals with its glucose intake and distribution. 

The article, A diabetes gestational glucose test, is meant for informational purposes only and is not to be construed as medical advice; see a physician for more specific help.

Diabetic Seniors Team

Related Articles

An Understanding of Juvenile Diabetes - Type 1, Type 2, adult onset diabetes, juvenile diabetes--what is it all about? For the non-diabetic these words are confusing and often misunderstood. However, if you have been a diabetic for any length of time, then you know the differences.

Gestational Diabetes - Gestational diabetes is characterized as the onset of abnormal blood glucose levels in conjunction with insulin irregularities in pregnant women. Gestational diabetes is generally diagnosed in pregnant women during their third trimester of pregnancy, and the disease accounts for approximately less than 5% of all pregnancies in the United States.

Type 1 Diabetes - Type 1 Diabetes, often referred to as juvenile onset diabetes or childhood diabetes, accounts for roughly 5% to 10% of all diagnosed cases of diabetes. Type 1 Diabetes is characterized as the inability for hormone producing pancreatic cells to produce any insulin. The hormone insulin is used to regulate levels of glucose in the blood stream; glucose is a form of energy used by cells throughout the body. However, with the absence of insulin in the blood stream, cells are unable to convert the glucose into energy. Despite that the majority of diagnosed cases of type 1 diabetes occur in children, it can develop at any time during adulthood.

Senior Diabetes - You must play an active role in managing your senior diabetes, from decisions you make about diet and exercise through your daily glucose monitoring to help your doctor better understand your health. The diagnosis of senior diabetes may be more common than you knew, but each unique situation will call for unique measures to help each senior understand how to live the richest, most rewarding life.

Diabetic Seniors - You must play an active role in managing your senior diabetes, from decisions you make about diet and exercise through your daily glucose monitoring to help your doctor better understand your health. The diagnosis of senior diabetes may be more common than you knew, but each unique situation will call for unique measures to help each senior understand how to live the richest, most rewarding life.

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Wilford Brimley

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