I posted a Jonathan update on his page, including the first good picture of his face.
Category Archives: Jonathan
Movin’ On Up
Jenny just had another checkup with the ob/gyn. Since Jenny is on insulin now for her GD, and Jonathan is growing rapidly, her doctor rescheduled her c-section for Monday, Jan 18. That’s just over a month from now. Woohoo! They estimate his weight at 5.5 pounds already, and he’ll be born at 38 weeks, so he should be fully developed by then.
I am thankful that God led/allowed me to arrange my work schedule to be off for nearly a month starting Jan 14. I wasn’t expecting Jonathan to arrive so soon, but I wanted to be prepared just in case. As always, God knew what he was doing. =)
I have updated the countdown!
Gestational Diabetes 101
Ok, some of you have been asking lots of questions about this GD stuff, so I thought I’d do a little Gestational Diabetes lesson. Before now, I didn’t really know much about Diabetes in general, except for a little I’ve learned from some friends that have a daughter with it. If you really want some great info – they have a fabulous website that I’d link to, but I don’t know how. 🙂 But you can get to it from the “Come on in, the senility is fine” link under friends on the right.
Anyway, there is a really big misconception when you hear “diabetes” that it’s all about not eating sugar. That’s a part of it, but the main thing you are trying to do is control ALL carbs you take in. Gestational diabetes occurs when your body starts putting out a lot more prego hormones than your insulin levels can handle. Insulin is what breaks down carbs into energy. The hormones from pregnancy start interfering with insulin, so your pancreas starts making more. If it can’t keep up, sometimes your pancreas will basically say “screw it, I’ll catch up with you when that darn placenta is gone” and you end up with Gestational Diabetes.
This means that you’ve got WAY too much sugar just running loose in your body, and not enough insulin to turn it into something useful. So, your body does what it can to cope – it hands all the excess over to the baby. Baby’s little pancreas can handle quite a lot, so it’s pumping insulin like crazy, turning all that extra sugar into fat, and insulin acts as a growth hormone, too, so you end up with a super chunky little linebacker of a baby if nothing is done to control the blood sugar levels.
So, most people think that means the easiest way to fix it would be to get rid of all sugar and carbs, right? Stick to an Adkins diet and you’ll be fine, right? Wrong. You still need some carbs for energy, and the baby needs A LOT of energy to grow. Cutting out all the carbs sends your body into fat burning mode, which is a little bit dangerous for the baby – when you burn fat, you make this chemical called ketones, which makes everything a little acidic. Babies don’t like acidic environments.
So, how do you control Gestational Diabetes? It has to do with the amount, timing, and type of carbs you take in. I can have 30-45 grams of carbs per meal, with 30 gram carb snacks in between. Yep, that means I’m actually eating more than before, it’s just different. Along with the carbs, you have to include protein, so that the carbs/sugar doesn’t hit your system all at once. Complicated yet? Let’s add another level. In order to help your body out, no one serving of carbs can be more than 15 grams. So, if you have to choose between a cookie that has 45 grams of carbs in it, and 3 cookies at 15 grams each, you need to go with the 3 cookies. (By the way, if anybody sees such magical cookies, let me know.)
Confused yet? Now, add in the glycemic index. This is a chart that rates foods based on how quickly your body absorbs the carbs in them. So you want to eat low glycemic index foods. For example, when picking a veggie, corn is not a good choice because it is a high glycemic index food – corn is a whole lot of sugars! But surprisingly, a sweet potato is low on the chart, so it’s a better choice!
This isn’t stuff I’ve had to memorize – I’ve got two great dieticians helping me through this process, and they’ve given me a lot of paperwork. Plus, each person is different, and their body handles things differently, so part of all this has been trial and error. For example, I’ve found that I can’t have a lot of any type of beans – that sends my blood sugar levels too high. But, a small cup of ice cream is fine if I’ve eaten a pretty high protein meal before it. Who knew?
For me, my typical day looks like this: I get up, and test for ketones. The goal is to not have any, because that means I’m not losing weight. Then I test my blood sugar with a glucose monitor (that’s the finger prick thing) to see what it did overnight. The diabetes doc wants that number to be under 90, while my OB/Gyn wants it under 105. Most of the time it is, but for a while there it started creeping up.
I eat breakfast (30 carbs and a protein) and then test 2 hours later. This number needs to be under 120. Then I have a snack. Then lunch (45 carbs), and test 2 hours later. Then a snack. Then dinner (45 carbs), and test 2 hours later. Then a snack before bed. See a pattern?
My numbers were doing fairly well, but the dinner and morning one kept creeping up, and when I could get them do go down, I was having high ketones the following morning. The docs said this was common, since the prego hormones start changing and pumping out more as you get closer to the end of pregnancy. So they put me on insulin. I actually broke down and cried in the office because I was freaked out by this, but it’s not that bad. I have two types of insulin – one fast acting, and one long acting. Both come in pens with tiny little needles that don’t even hurt. And this is giving me a little more freedom with what I eat, since I can go a little bit over and still be ok.
While all of this seems super complicated, I know in the end it will be worth it. I’m just ready for the end to be here! If you have questions, or want to see all the new gadgets I carry around with me, just ask! I don’t mind talking about any of it, and hopefully you’ve learned a bit through this post. Please continue to pray for this pregnancy, my sanity, and discipline – Christmastime is carb loaded! 🙂
Six Weeks to Go!
I reset the countdown on Jonathan’s page with his planned delivery date of Jan 25. As a result, you’ll be able to see how many days we actually have left (assuming he doesn’t arrive early), but most of the time it will show the wrong week (generally a week ahead of schedule). By this point, I figure the days remaining are more important.
You know what this means: only six weeks to go! Wow, that doesn’t sound like long at all. We’re mostly ready but still need to get his room painted, get some newborn diapers, and pack our bags. Even though a c-section is major surgery, we’re both thankful we won’t have to relieve Brenden’s difficult labor with Jonathan.
Jonathan Report
Today was our 31-week checkup with the ob/gyn. Jonathan and Jenny are both doing great! I posted a full report on Jonathan’s page to keep the pregnancy-related stuff together.
Speedbump
Between weeks 24 and 28, nearly all pregnant women in America are tested for gestational diabetes (GD), a form of diabetes caused by hormonal changes during pregnancy. It often has no obvious symptoms, so the glucose test is the only way to find it. Yesterday we got positive results for Jenny’s glucose test, indicating that she has the condition.
Obviously, this isn’t what we wanted or expected, but as far as pregnancy problems go, it’s certainly not the worst outcome, either. GD elevates both the mother’s and baby’s blood sugar and insulin levels. The mother needs to change her diet to reduce carbs and smooth out her food intake throughout the day to keep her blood sugar levels both lower and more stable. Some mothers require insulin shots. For the baby, GD causes him to store the extra blood sugar as fat, which can lead to higher birth weights, earlier births, jaundice, and other problems. Long-term, baby is more likely to be overweight, and both mother and baby are more likely to develop Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes later in life. GD in mothers usually disappears on its own around 6 weeks after birth.
Jenny is handling the diagnosis well. The hardest part for both of us will be modifying our very carb-heavy diets, but we are up for the challenge. We have an appointment with a nutritionist Thursday afternoon and a diabetes specialist on Monday afternoon to discuss diet, blood testing, the need for insulin, and other issues. Please pray for us as we get some answers and work out a new eating plan. Also pray that Jonathan remains healthy and doesn’t get too big. I’m doing my part by scarfing down the half-gallon of Blue Bell that Jenny bought the day before she got the news.
For more information on GD, check WebMD.com.