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Diabetes High Risk Pregnancies

A high-risk pregnancy is a pregnancy that involves increased health risks for the pregnant person, fetus or both. Certain health conditions and your age (being over 35 or under 17 when pregnant) can make a pregnancy high risk. These pregnancies require close monitoring to reduce the chance of complications.

What is a high-risk pregnancy?

All pregnancies carry risks. The definition of a “high-risk” pregnancy is any pregnancy that carries increased health risks for the pregnant person, fetus or both. People with high-risk pregnancies may need extra care before, during and after they give birth. This helps to reduce the possibility of complications.

However, having a pregnancy that’s considered high risk doesn’t mean you or your fetus will have problems. Many people experience healthy pregnancies and normal labor and delivery despite having special health needs.

What are the signs and symptoms of high-risk pregnancy?

Talk to your doctor right away if you experience any of the following symptoms during pregnancy, whether or not your pregnancy is considered high-risk:

  • Abdominal pain that doesn’t go away.
  • Chest pain.
  • Dizziness or fainting.
  • Extreme fatigue.
  • The fetus's movement stopping or slowing.
  • Fever over 100.4°F.
  • Heart palpitations.
  • Nausea and vomiting that’s worse than normal morning sickness.
  • Severe headache that won’t go away or gets worse.
  • Swelling, redness or pain in your face or limbs.
  • Thoughts about harming yourself or the fetus.
  • Trouble breathing.