The incidence of diabetes
mellitus, a chronic, lifelong condition that affects the body’s ability to use
the energy found in food, is likely to increase 79.4 million in India, a 15 percent
increase from the current 31.7 million, said doctors.
They also said apart from India the cases are also rising in other parts of the world with the figures likely to touch 366 million by 2030 from 171 million a decade ago.
According to doctors, pregnant women of today’s era are highly prone to suffer from Gestational Diabetes Mellitus (GDM), if they have obesity before marriage and also are above 25 years of age.
Rajesh Khadgawat, Additional Professor of Endocrinology at All India Institute of Medical Sciences(AIIMS) said, “Gestational diabetes can be very hard on women as the burden of diabetes on women is unique, because it can affect both mothers and their unborn children. Diabetes can cause difficulties during pregnancy such as a miscarriage or a baby born with birth defects.”
According to AIIMS, GDM has
increased by 16 to 27 percent in several race, ethnicity groups during the past
20 years.
Explaining the condition better, Ajay Aggarwal, endocrinologist from Fortis Hospital said, “The placenta (a flattened circular organ in the uterus of pregnant) supports the baby as it grows. Hormones from the placenta help the baby develop. But these hormones also block the action of the mother's insulin in her body. This problem is called insulin resistance. Insulin resistance makes it hard for the mother's body to use insulin. She may need up to three times as much insulin.”
In another study, Centres
for Disease Control and Prevention has said the prevalence of gestational
diabetes is as high as 9.2 percent.
Gestational diabetes starts when body is not able to make and
use all the insulin it needs for pregnancy. Without enough insulin, glucose cannot
leave the blood and be changed to energy.
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