If your healthcare provider just told you that your blood sugar test came back high during pregnancy, you might be feeling worried, confused, or even scared. But take a deep breath—you're not alone, and this is very manageable.

Gestational diabetes affects about 1 in 7 pregnant women in Nigeria, and thousands of Nigerian mothers manage it successfully every single day. This guide will walk you through what gestational diabetes is, why it happens, what your test results mean, and most importantly, exactly what you need to do to keep yourself and your baby healthy.

What Is Gestational Diabetes?

Gestational diabetes is high blood sugar that develops only during pregnancy. It's not the same as diabetes before you got pregnant (Type 1 or Type 2), and it's not something you caused.

Here's what happens: During pregnancy, your body produces hormones that make it harder for insulin (the hormone that controls blood sugar) to work properly. This is called "insulin resistance," and it's completely normal during pregnancy. However, in some women—especially in Nigeria where family history of diabetes is common—the pancreas can't make enough extra insulin to overcome this resistance, so blood sugar stays too high.

The good news? Unlike permanent diabetes, gestational diabetes usually goes away completely after your baby is born. But managing it now is crucial for your baby's health and your own.

Key Fact

Gestational diabetes is about hormones and pregnancy, not about diet mistakes or poor choices. It can happen to any woman, regardless of weight or lifestyle.

Do You Have Symptoms? (Usually Not)

Here's something that often surprises women: most women with gestational diabetes don't feel any different. You might have no symptoms at all, which is why screening tests are so important.

If you do notice symptoms, they might include:

If you notice any of these, mention them to your healthcare provider. But remember: the absence of symptoms does NOT mean your blood sugar is fine. That's why the glucose tolerance test is so important.

Who Is at Higher Risk for Gestational Diabetes in Nigeria?

Gestational diabetes is more common in certain groups. If any of these apply to you, your healthcare provider may screen you earlier than the standard 24–28 weeks:

Risk Factors More Common in Nigeria:

Take Action

Even if you don't think you're at risk, all pregnant women in Nigeria should be screened at 24–28 weeks. If you have multiple risk factors, ask your healthcare provider about earlier screening.

The Glucose Tolerance Test: What to Expect at a Nigerian Hospital or Lab

The standard screening test is called the Glucose Tolerance Test (GTT), also known as an Oral Glucose Tolerance Test (OGTT). Here's what actually happens, so you know what to expect:

Before Your Test

During Your Test (Takes About 2–3 Hours)

  1. Fasting blood draw (Time 0): A nurse or lab technician takes a small sample of blood while you're fasting. This measures your baseline blood sugar.
  2. Glucose drink: You'll be given a small bottle of sugary liquid to drink (usually 75 grams of glucose dissolved in water). It tastes like very sweet juice. Drink it completely within 5 minutes.
  3. 1-hour blood draw: Exactly 1 hour after finishing the drink, another blood sample is taken.
  4. 2-hour blood draw: Exactly 2 hours after the drink, a final blood sample is taken.

During the Test: Tips

After Your Test

Pro Tip

If your first screening test is normal (which it probably will be—about 85% of women pass), you're done. You don't need retesting during pregnancy.

Understanding Your Results: WHO Diagnosis Criteria for Gestational Diabetes

Nigeria follows WHO (World Health Organization) 2013 guidelines for diagnosing gestational diabetes. Here are the thresholds:

Test Type Abnormal Reading (mg/dL) What This Means
Fasting (before glucose drink) ≥ 92 mg/dL Blood sugar too high while fasting
1-hour (after glucose drink) ≥ 180 mg/dL Blood sugar spike too high after sugar load
2-hour ≥ 153 mg/dL Blood sugar still too high after 2 hours

What these numbers mean: If any one of your readings is at or above these levels, you'll be diagnosed with gestational diabetes. Your healthcare provider will explain your specific results.

Your Results Are Normal

If all three readings are below the numbers above, congratulations—you do not have gestational diabetes. No further monitoring needed (though a healthy diet remains important!).

Your Results Show Gestational Diabetes

If one or more readings are at or above the thresholds, you have gestational diabetes. This is not a medical emergency, but it does mean you need to start managing your blood sugar right away. Your healthcare provider will likely:

Important

About 85% of women with gestational diabetes can manage it through diet and exercise alone, without needing medication. You'll likely be one of them.

What Does Gestational Diabetes Mean for Your Baby?

This is the question every mother asks, and it deserves a clear, honest answer.

If Your Gestational Diabetes Is NOT Well Controlled

High blood sugar during pregnancy can affect your baby in these ways:

If Your Gestational Diabetes IS Well Controlled

Your baby will be fine. Studies show that with good blood sugar management throughout pregnancy, outcomes are essentially the same as for babies of mothers without gestational diabetes. Your baby's long-term health is not affected.

Reassurance

Managing your gestational diabetes now is one of the best things you can do for your baby's health and safety during labour.

Diet Management: What Nigerian Pregnant Women Should Eat

Diet is the cornerstone of managing gestational diabetes. Good news: you don't need special or expensive foods. You need to understand portions and choose smarter carbohydrates.

Carbohydrates to Reduce or Avoid

These foods spike blood sugar quickly and should be limited:

Better Carbohydrate Choices

These are lower glycemic index foods that don't spike blood sugar as quickly:

Protein: Eat More

Protein helps stabilize blood sugar. Include protein in every meal and snack:

Vegetables and Fruits

Eat freely:

Fats and Oils

Sample Day of Eating (Nigerian Context)

Breakfast: 2 eggs + 1 slice whole wheat bread + 1 glass of unsweetened milk

Morning snack: Apple + handful of groundnuts

Lunch: Grilled chicken + 1 cup ofada rice (measured) + leafy vegetable soup (without added sugar)

Afternoon snack: Yoghurt (plain, unsweetened) or 2 slices of orange

Dinner: Fish stew with okra and tomatoes + 1 medium boiled sweet potato

Watch Portions

Even "good" carbohydrates affect blood sugar. Measure your portions of rice, bread, and starchy foods—don't eat unlimited amounts even if the food is healthy.

Exercise and Movement During Pregnancy

Physical activity helps your body use insulin more effectively and is safe during pregnancy with gestational diabetes.

Safe Activities

Start Moving After Eating

A key tip: Walk for 10–15 minutes right after your largest meals (especially lunch and dinner). This really helps prevent blood sugar spikes.

Avoid

Talk to your healthcare provider before starting any new exercise program.

Real-World Movement

If you don't have access to a gym, normal daily activities count: walking to the market, doing household chores, and walking to visit family are all helpful.

Monitoring Your Blood Sugar at Home

Once diagnosed with gestational diabetes, your healthcare provider will likely ask you to check your blood sugar at home. Here's what you need to know:

What You'll Need

When to Test

Typical testing schedule (ask your provider for your specific plan):

Target Blood Sugar Levels During Pregnancy (WHO/AFYA Standards)

Recording Your Results

Write down or photograph your readings and share them with your healthcare provider at each visit. Look for patterns:

When to Contact Your Provider

Get Help Immediately If

You feel faint, dizzy, shaky, or confused (signs of very low blood sugar). Eat something sweet immediately (juice, sweet drink, sugar) and then contact your healthcare provider.

What About Insulin Injections?

About 15% of women with gestational diabetes need insulin because diet and exercise alone don't control blood sugar enough.

This is NOT a failure. It means your body is working hard during pregnancy and needs extra support. Insulin is completely safe during pregnancy—it does not harm your baby.

If your provider recommends insulin:

Does Gestational Diabetes Go Away After Birth?

Yes, in most cases.

After your baby is born, your insulin resistance drops rapidly, and blood sugar usually returns to normal within days or weeks. You won't need to check blood sugar after pregnancy (unless your provider recommends it).

But Here's the Reality

While gestational diabetes itself goes away, about 50% of women who had gestational diabetes will develop Type 2 diabetes within 10 years. This is preventable.

How to Prevent Future Diabetes

The good news: you've already learned how to eat well for blood sugar control. You can use those skills for life.

Silver Lining

Having gestational diabetes is an early warning sign that gives you the opportunity to prevent Type 2 diabetes. Many women use this as motivation to build healthier habits that benefit their whole family.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I prevent gestational diabetes if I know I'm at risk?

You can't completely prevent it (it's not your fault), but you can reduce risk. A healthy diet before pregnancy and staying physically active help. If you're planning pregnancy and have risk factors, talk to your healthcare provider about pre-pregnancy counseling. During pregnancy, maintaining a healthy weight gain (not too much, not too little) and eating well help, but some women will still develop it despite doing everything right. If you do, that's not a personal failure—it's about pregnancy hormones.

Is my baby in danger if I have gestational diabetes?

No, not if you manage it. With good blood sugar control (which most women achieve through diet and exercise), your baby's risk is the same as for any other baby. The risks we discussed earlier (macrosomia, jaundice, low blood sugar) only occur when gestational diabetes is NOT controlled. Your job now is to manage it—and you can do that. Talk to your healthcare provider if anxiety is affecting you; this is common and treatable.

Do I need a special, expensive diet? Can I still eat Nigerian food?

Absolutely, you can still eat Nigerian food. You don't need expensive special foods. The key is choosing better versions and watching portions: ofada rice instead of white rice, more beans and fish, more vegetables. Your traditional soups are fine (just ask the cook not to add extra sugar). Jollof rice is okay in small portions at celebrations. You're not giving up your food culture; you're making it work for your blood sugar. A nutritionist familiar with Nigerian cooking can help you adapt recipes.

What happens during labour and delivery if I have gestational diabetes?

Labour is similar to any other pregnancy, with some extra monitoring. Your healthcare provider will likely check your blood sugar during labour and may suggest avoiding high-sugar IV fluids. If your baby is very large (detected by ultrasound), they might discuss whether vaginal birth is safe or if a planned caesarean section is better. You'll also be monitored for signs of high blood pressure. Most women with well-controlled gestational diabetes have vaginal births without complications. Your healthcare team will discuss your individual plan with you.

You've Got This

A diagnosis of gestational diabetes during pregnancy is not the disaster it might feel like right now. Thousands of Nigerian women manage it every single pregnancy and go on to have healthy babies and healthy lives afterward.

What you do right now—learning about your diagnosis, understanding your food choices, checking your blood sugar, moving your body—matters deeply. You're not being punished, and you haven't failed. You've been given information that lets you protect your baby's health and your own.

You are stronger than you think. Your baby is lucky to have a mother who cares this much.

Medical Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes and is not a substitute for personalized medical advice. Gestational diabetes management varies by individual. Always follow your healthcare provider's specific recommendations. If you have concerns about your health or your baby's health, contact your doctor, midwife, or the nearest hospital immediately. AFYA is not liable for decisions made based on this information.

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