Posts Tagged ‘Blood sugar’
Why Diabetics Prone Depression?
Having diabetes does not automatically suffer from depression. However, it is found that diabetics are more prone to feel depressed than those without diabetes. Why? Here we have the possible causes.
After you’re diagnosed with diabetes, you feel that the world is coming at you with all its changes: exercise, diet, medical tests. Feel you must control every aspect of your life: what you eat, what time, how much, the exercise you do, how you travel, what to do when you’re dining out, etc.. Besides, now that you are diabetic you have to establish a close relationship with your doctor and you should mark your calendar the dates for your visits. The words glucose, blood sugar, diet, carbohydrate, complications, weight, lurk all the time in your head. Besides, you’re wondering “why me?” Definitely, having diabetes is not easy to assimilate.
However, remember that the shock of diagnosis, is normal. Then when you informed and understand what it’s about having diabetes and the important role you play you in control, you will feel more relieved or alleviated. But this does not mean that you have factors that increase your risk for depression.
Excess body weight in pregnant women
Being overweight or obese increases the chances that a woman delivering a baby extra-large, and that excess weight significantly increases the risk for preeclampsia, a potentially fatal complication of pregnancy, according to specialists from the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.
Women have more difficulties in the delivery of babies when they are very large, while infants are also at risk of injury during birth, including shoulder dislocation.
While women who are overweight or obese are known to have a higher risk of having very large babies and experience other pregnancy complications has been difficult to separate the effects of maternal weight, the gestational diabetes.
This led to investigate whether body mass index (BMI), or standard measure of weight relative to height, which is used to measure the weight of a person who could influence the risk of pregnancy, fetal health and newborn health, regardless of blood sugar levels of the mother.
Recent studies have shown that dietary changes can effectively treat gestational diabetes by more than 90 percent of women with the condition.