Diabetes is a condition in which the body can't make enough insulin, or can't use insulin normally. Insulin is a hormone. It helps sugar (glucose) in the blood get into cells of the body to be used as fuel. When glucose can't enter the cells, it builds up in the blood. This leads to high blood sugar (hyperglycemia).
High blood sugar can cause problems all over the body. It can damage blood vessels and nerves. It can harm the eyes, kidneys, and heart. In early pregnancy, high blood sugar can lead to birth defects in a growing baby.
There are three types of diabetes:
- Type 1 diabetes. This is an autoimmune disorder. The body's immune system damages the cells in the pancreas that make insulin.
- Type 2 diabetes. This is when the body can't make enough insulin or use it normally. It's not an autoimmune disease.
- Gestational diabetes. This is a condition in which the blood glucose level goes up and other diabetic symptoms appear during pregnancy in a person who hasn't been diagnosed with diabetes before. It happens in about 3 in 100 to 9 in 100 pregnant people.