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Oral Glucose Tolerance Test: For Pregnant, Preparation & Results

What is the glucose tolerance test?

 Picture of a Woman Is Getting a Glucose Tolerance Test Picture of a Woman Is Getting a Glucose Tolerance Test

Though no longer routinely used for diagnosing diabetes.

  • The oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) was the gold standard for making the diagnosis of type 2 diabetes.
  • It is still commonly used during pregnancy for diagnosing gestational diabetes.
  • With an oral glucose tolerance test, the person fasts overnight (at least 8 hours, but not more than 16 hours).
  • The next morning, the fasting plasma glucose is tested.
  • After this test, the person receives a dose of oral glucose (the dose depends upon the length of the test).
  • There are several methods employed by obstetricians to do this test, but the one described here is standard.
  • Usually, the glucose is in a sweet-tasting liquid that the person drinks.
  • Blood samples are taken up to four times at different time points after consumption of the sugar to measure the blood glucose.

How reliable is the glucose tolerance test?

For the glucose tolerance test to give reliable results, the person must be in good health (not have any other illnesses, not even a common cold). Also, the person should be normally active (not lying down, for example, as an inpatient in a hospital) and should not be taking medicines that could affect the blood glucose.

  • In preparation for the oral glucose tolerance test, the person should eat and drink as they normally would.
  • The morning of the test, the person should not smoke or consume caffeine.

Diabetes test

10 Diabetes Questions to Ask Your Doctor

  1. Should I check my blood sugar levels at home with a glucose monitor? How
    often should I check them?
  2. What are my goals regarding blood sugar levels?
  3. What are the warning signs or symptoms that my blood sugars are too high?
    What do I do if my blood sugars are too high?
  4. ….

Read more questions to ask your doctor about diabetes. »

What does the glucose tolerance test measure?

The classic oral glucose tolerance test measures blood glucose levels five times over a period of three hours. Some physicians simply take a baseline blood sample followed by a sample two hours after drinking the glucose solution. In a person without diabetes, the glucose levels rise and then fall quickly. In someone with diabetes, glucose levels rise higher than normal and fail to come back down as fast.

People with glucose levels between normal and diabetic levels have so-called impaired glucose tolerance (IGT). People with impaired glucose tolerance do not have diabetes.

Each year, 5% to 10% of people whose test results show impaired glucose tolerance actually develop diabetes. Weight loss and exercise may help people with impaired glucose tolerance return their glucose levels to normal. In addition, some physicians advocate the use of medications, such as metformin (Glucophage), to help prevent/delay the onset of overt diabetes. Studies have shown that impaired glucose tolerance itself may be a risk factor for the development of heart disease, and whether impaired glucose tolerance turns out to be an entity that deserves treatment itself is something that physicians are currently debating.

What is the preparation for a glucose tolerance test?

  • As mentioned previously, preparation for the oral glucose tolerance test involves fasting overnight (from 8 to 16 hours) and participating normally in activities of daily living.
  • The individual should eat and drink as they normally do prior to the test.
  • The morning of the test, the person should not consume caffeine or smoke.




QUESTION

Diabetes is defined best as…
See Answer

How are the results of the glucose tolerance test evaluated?

Glucose tolerance tests may lead to one of the following diagnoses:

  • Normal response: A person is said to have a normal
    response when the two hour glucose level is less than 140 mg/dl, and all values
    between 0 and 2 hours are less than 200 mg/dl.
  • Impaired glucose tolerance (IGT): A person is said to have impaired
    glucose tolerance when the fasting plasma glucose is
    less than 126 mg/dl and the two hour glucose level is between 140 and 199
    mg/dl. This is sometimes referred to as "prediabetes" because people with IGT
    have a higher risk of developing diabetes.
  • Diabetes: A person has diabetes when two diagnostic
    tests done on different days show that the blood glucose level is high. This means either the
    two hour levels is greater than 200 mg/dl or the fasting glucose is noted as greater than 126 mg/dl.
    A
    glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) level of 6.5% or more also supports a
    diagnosis of diabetes mellitus.

  • Diabetes during pregnancy: A pregnant woman has diabetes
    if she has a fasting plasma glucose of over 92 mg/dl, or a two hour glucose level
    greater than 153 mg/dl.

What about glucose tolerance testing during pregnancy?

As mentioned previously, the glucose tolerance test is used for the diagnosis
of gestational diabetes (diabetes that develops during pregnancy). It may be
used if there are equivocal fasting or random blood glucose results, or to
screen for gestational diabetes in pregnant women between 24 to 28 weeks of
gestation who are not known to have diabetes.

The test may also be used in the postpartum period to detect diabetes in women who had gestational diabetes during pregnancy. Women who had gestational diabetes do not always develop diabetes later in life, but they should undergo diabetes screening at least every
three years throughout their life.

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