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Health Information Gestational diabetes: Checking your blood sugar
Gestational diabetes: Checking your blood sugar
Introduction
If you have
gestational diabetes, you need to know when your blood
sugar level is outside the
safe range. Fortunately, you can see what your blood sugar level is anywhere
and anytime by using a home blood sugar meter. Within a minute or two, you can
know what your blood sugar level is.
Key points
Knowing your blood sugar level helps you
treat low or high blood sugar before it becomes an
emergency.
Knowing your blood sugar level also helps you know how
exercise and food affect your blood sugar and how much
insulin to take (if you take insulin).
Checking your blood sugar helps you feel more in control of your
diabetes during your pregnancy.
Four keys to success in monitoring
your blood sugar are:
Keep your meter and supplies with you at
all times.
Make it a habit to check your blood sugar level. Build
it into your routine.
Prick the sides of your fingers, not the
tips. The tip of a finger is more sensitive than its sides.
Check
your blood sugar meter's accuracy when you visit your doctor. Compare your
results with your doctor's results.
You need to
check your blood sugar every day to make sure it is staying in a safe range. If
it is staying too high, you may need to adjust your treatment, or you may need
to start taking insulin if you are not taking it already. You can know what
your blood sugar level is at any time by using a home blood sugar meter. This
is often referred to as home blood sugar monitoring or self-testing. Your
doctor may want you to check your blood sugar level 4 to 6 times a day. You
will also need to test your blood sugar if you feel faint, dizzy, unusually
tired, nervous, or jittery; break out in a cold sweat; have a headache; and/or
feel sick to your stomach.
To
test your blood sugar level using a blood sugar meter, prick your finger with a
small needle called a lancet to collect a drop of blood. Follow the directions
to prepare your test strip and meter to receive the blood sample. Within a few
seconds to 2 minutes, the meter shows the results of your test.
You do not have to draw blood from a vein to do
home blood sugar monitoring. The correct answer is b. Home blood sugar
monitoring involves using a drop of blood from your finger.
Home blood sugar monitoring does not involve
testing the amount of sugar in a urine sample. The correct answer is b. Home
blood sugar monitoring involves using a drop of blood from your finger.
Monitoring your blood
sugar level at home helps put your mind at ease by helping you:
Know when your blood sugar is low. Most women
who have gestational diabetes do not experience low blood sugar levels. If your
blood sugar drops just below your safe level and you quickly eat something that
contains sugar, your blood sugar will not drop to a level that is dangerous for
you and your baby.
Know when your blood sugar is high. Frequent high blood sugar
levels may lead to
high blood pressure, your baby growing too large to be
delivered naturally, and your baby having low blood sugar levels (hypoglycemia) soon after birth.
Know what
your blood sugar level is before a meal. If you take insulin, you can use your
results to determine how much insulin to take.
Know how exercise
affects your blood sugar. Exercise usually lowers your blood sugar
level.
Know what your blood sugar is when you are sick. Severe
illness or stress usually causes higher-than-normal blood sugar
levels.
Know when the foods you eat or the amount of insulin you
take (if you take insulin) need to be adjusted.
Test Your Knowledge
Home blood sugar monitoring helps you know how
exercise has affected your blood sugar.
Home blood sugar monitoring does help you know
how exercise has affected your blood sugar. Checking your blood sugar after
exercising will help you know whether your blood sugar levels are staying
within a safe range.
Home blood sugar monitoring does help you know
how exercise has affected your blood sugar. Checking your blood sugar after
exercising will help you know whether your blood sugar levels are staying
within a safe range.
Here is a simple way to
monitor your blood sugar at home.
Get organized
Before you start testing your blood
sugar:
Talk with your doctor about how often and
when you should test. Record this information on the
blood sugar testing times form(What is a PDF document?)
.
Link testing your blood sugar with
other daily activities, such as preparing breakfast. This will help you
establish the habit of self-testing.
Use the
list of supplies to gather the things you need to test your blood sugar. Keep
your supplies together so that you can do a test quickly if you need
to.
Check your equipment before doing each test.
Check the expiration date on your testing
strips. If you use test strips after the expiration date, you may not get
accurate results.
Make sure the code numbers on the testing strips
bottle match the numbers on your meter. If the numbers do not match, follow the
directions that come with your meter for changing the code
numbers.
Check the accuracy of your meter's results. Use the sugar
control solution made by your meter's manufacturer. Follow the directions that
came with your meter for using the control solution.
The more often you
test your blood sugar, the more you will know about how well your treatment is
working.
Follow these steps when you test your blood
sugar:
Wash your hands with warm soapy water, and
dry them well with a clean towel.
Put a clean needle (lancet) in
the lancet device. The lancet device is a pen-sized holder for the lancet. It
holds and positions the lancet and controls how deeply the lancet goes into
your skin.
Get a test strip from your bottle of testing strips. Put
the lid back on the bottle immediately to prevent moisture from affecting your
other strips.
Get your blood sugar meter ready. Follow the
manufacturer's instructions for your specific meter.
Use the lancet
device to stick the side of your fingertip with the lancet.
Put a
drop of blood on the correct spot of the test strip, covering the test area
well.
Using a clean cotton ball, apply pressure to the place where
you stuck your finger to stop the bleeding.
Wait for the results.
Some meters take only a few seconds to give you the results.
Record the results
Recording your blood sugar
results is very important. Your doctor will use this record to see how well
your treatment is working and to know if anything needs to be changed, or if
insulin needs to be started. Be sure to take your record with you on each visit
to your doctor or diabetes educator.
To record your results, you
can:
Get printed blood sugar logs from companies
that make diabetic medications and supplies.
Make a blood sugar log
in a notebook. You can record other information in the log or notebook, such as
insulin doses, your exercise, and what you have eaten.
Use your
blood sugar meter, if possible. Some blood sugar meters can store blood sugar
results and some can calculate your average blood sugar for a period of time,
such as over a few weeks or a month.
Preventing sore fingers
Your fingertips may get
sore from testing your blood sugar so often. Here are some tips to help prevent
sore fingers:
Do not prick the tip of your finger. It is
more painful and harder to get enough blood to do the test accurately. Also, do
not prick your toes, because your feet can become infected.
Don't
squeeze your fingertip. If you have trouble getting a drop of blood large
enough to cover the test area of the strip, hang your hand down below your
waist and count to 5, or place your finger in warm water for a minute or
so.
Use a different finger each time. Establish a pattern for which
finger you stick so that you will not use some fingers more than others. Avoid
for a few days any fingers that are sore.
Use a different device.
Some new blood sugar meters use lancet devices that can get a blood sample from
sites other than the fingers, such as the forearm. If you are having trouble
with sore fingers, you may want to get one of these new meters.
Test Your Knowledge
To test your blood sugar, you need to put a drop of
blood on the test strip used with your home blood sugar meter.
To test your blood sugar at home, you need to
put a drop of blood on a test strip. Within seconds to 2 minutes after you
place the test strip into the meter, the meter will provide the results of your
blood sugar test.
To test your blood sugar at home, you do need
to put a drop of blood on a test strip. Within seconds to 2 minutes after you
place the test strip into the meter, the meter will provide the results of your
blood sugar test.
Now that you have read this
information, you are ready to start monitoring your blood sugar levels at
home.
Talk with your doctor
If
you have questions about this information, take it with you when you visit your
doctor.
If you haven't talked with your doctor about when and how
often to test your blood sugar, do so during your next visit. On the
blood sugar testing times form(What is a PDF document?)
, record the times you need to check your blood
sugar each day, and record when you are stressed or ill.
If you would like more information on blood sugar
monitoring, the following resources are available:
Computerized records
Many blood sugar meter
manufacturers offer computer software programs that allow blood sugar test
results to be compiled and analyzed on your home computer. The computer results
can then be printed out and carried with you when you visit your doctor. Some
programs allow you to send the information to the doctor electronically.
Organization
American Diabetes Association (ADA)
1701 North Beauregard Street
Alexandria, VA 22311
Phone:
1-800-DIABETES (1-800-342-2383)
E-mail:
AskADA@diabetes.org
Web Address:
www.diabetes.org
The American Diabetes Association (ADA) is a national organization
for health professionals and consumers. Almost every state has a local office.
ADA sets the standards for the care of people with diabetes. Its focus is on
research for the prevention and treatment of all types of diabetes. ADA
provides patient and professional education mainly through its publications,
which include the monthly magazine Diabetes Forecast,
books, brochures, cookbooks and meal planning guides, and pamphlets. ADA also
provides information for parents about caring for a child with diabetes.
More information about the different types of diabetes
can be found in these topics:
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