If you had diabetes when pregnant, you likely got to stop your medications and intense regimen of blood sugar checking almost as soon as your baby was born. And if you keep up your diabetic diet, exercise, and especially if you breastfed you were likely to not to be diabetic in those early days. But only testing can determine if you have a normal blood sugar or not. The current recommendation is to get tested at the time of your post partum visit, and your physician may recommend a 2 hour sugar tolerance test (GTT). This more rigid testing is finding that about one in three women who are tested right at that 6 week check up will still have diabetes. And current studies are showing about half of all those who had diabetes in pregnancy will become diabetic in later life. Some gynos will not test until about 3 months out, and most will recommend testing again as your baby turns 3, to see if you are a diabetic. There are a number of ways to test once you have had a baby, but having the 2 hour test is probably the most accurate. Gab with your gyno and figure out what the best plan is for your diet and testing.
Decidual Cast Periods can be fairly easy, passing some tissue at a time, or off can come the whole lining in one piece called a decidual cast. Generally the lining of the uterus is only 6-8 mm thick at the time of the menstrual period, and it is shed gradually, a few cells at a time. The decidual cast is when the entire lining passes spontaneously. It's not uncommon, but it usually both uncomfortable, and alarming to some. But us women are designed to have some sort of periods Or Not? We have to pass tissue each month. Or Not? Are they good for us? Or Not? Do we want them? Or Not? Is this something that is individual? Or Not? It's a complex topic that I will be discussing a lot over my time in this blog. So lets start with basics: How much do we bleed and what are we loosing, and just what was this that the patient passed? And another basic: track your periods, and the Women's Health Practice site http://www.womenshealthpractice.com/media/pdf/menstrual_chart.pdf you...
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