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Apex Nursing

Chart — Maternal-Newborn

Diabetes in Pregnancy Comparison Chart

The dividing line is timing: gestational diabetes begins after organogenesis, so its risks are about growth; pre-existing diabetes is present during organogenesis, so its risks start with formation — and everything in management follows from that difference.

Educational use only. Targets, screening, and insulin management follow provider orders and current guidelines — this chart compares the conditions for learning. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

GDM vs Pre-Existing Diabetes

FeatureGestational DiabetesPre-Existing Type 1 / Type 2
Onset / detectionDevelops mid-pregnancy from placental insulin resistance; found by 24–28 week screeningPredates pregnancy; managed from the first prenatal visit (early A1c)
First-trimester riskMinimal — glucose is typically normal during organogenesisCongenital anomaly risk rises with periconception A1c — preconception control is the intervention
ManagementNutrition and activity first; insulin added when targets miss (most never need it)Insulin from the start for type 1; type 2 commonly transitions to insulin; needs climb steeply through pregnancy
Hypoglycemia riskLow unless on insulinSignificant — especially type 1 in the first trimester and with tightened targets
DKA riskRareReal in type 1 — can occur at lower glucose levels in pregnancy and is a fetal emergency
Fetal/neonatal risksMacrosomia, shoulder dystocia, neonatal hypoglycemia, polyhydramniosAll of those plus anomalies (timing of exposure), growth restriction with vascular disease, stillbirth risk — denser surveillance
Labor & deliveryGlucose checks per protocol; anticipate dystocia with macrosomia; newborn glucose monitoringOften insulin/dextrose infusions with hourly glucose; same newborn vigilance, higher stakes
After deliveryResistance resolves — most stop treatment; OGTT at 4–12 weeks; high lifetime type 2 riskInsulin needs drop sharply (watch hypoglycemia); chronic management resumes and continues

The Shared Endpoint

• Both pathways converge on the same newborn risk: hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia after the cord is cut — early feeds and glucose checks for every infant of a diabetic mother

• Both demand tighter glucose targets than non-pregnant care

• Both make jitteriness, poor feeding, and lethargy in the newborn a glucose check, not an observation note

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) · AWHONN · American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) — newborn. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →