Are You Feeling Extremely Tired During Pregnancy? Here's What This Can Mean...
Majority of women and even most healthcare providers think it's normal for women to feel fatigue and exhaustion during pregnancy, especially during the first three months.
Extreme fatigue, nausea, headaches, vomiting, loss of appetite and food aversions are all symptoms of pregnancy a lot of women experience during their first trimester.
It's also common in the third trimester, affecting an estimated sixty-percent of all pregnant women.
But, there's a blurred line between what's "common" and what's actually considered "normal" and healthy in pregnancy.
There can be many reasons why you may be feeling unwell during pregnancy, and not fully able to enjoy this experience to bond with your baby while she or her is nesting and growing inside of you.
It's why you shouldn't overlook or normalized feeling unwell.
In this article I'll give you three reasons why you feel ill, and they're all related to your nutrition!
1. You may have low iron levels.
For women, our demand for iron increases drastically during pregnancy. When you're pregnant the volume of blood in your body increases by as much as 50 percent to support both you and your growing baby.
This is why iron-deficiency anemia is so common in pregnant women.
This upregulation of iron demand, when not supported properly, can decrease your blood’s oxygen concentration. The result is one tired mama-to-be left with little to no energy.
Make sure your diet includes plenty of iron-rich foods.
Women who choose not to eat animal food sources will need to put extra focus and attention in getting these vitamins and minerals from other food sources in the RIGHT amount.
I formulated Iron Support and my Prenatal & Beyond Multivitamins to help with this too!
They include bioavailable iron, copper and vitamin c to help with iron aborption and its assimilation in your body.
2. You likely have low electrolytes.
Electrolytes are essential minerals like sodium, potassium, calcium, phosphorus and etc, that have an eletric charge when they are dissolved by your body.
Low electrolytes during pregnancy can be dangerous because it can lead to dehydration, feeling thirsty, fatigue, sluggishness, headaches and dizzines.
This can lead to complications for you and baby.
Dehydratioln can be dangerous during pregnancy because the placenta needs water to transfer nutrients to the baby. And, the amniotic sac uses fluids to protect the baby.
Dehydration due to low electrolytes can also trigger early contractions, increasing the risk of preterm labor.
To prevent low electrolytes drink over 64 ounces of water daily, and increase your natural fruit intake. Fruits are high in water and electrolytes.
Our prental vitamins contains essential electrolytes as well.
3. Your blood sugar levels are not regulated.
While pregnant and outside of pregnancy, blood sugar that drops too low will lead to a drop in energy.
This could be what's contributing to your pregnancy symptoms, because your increased blood supply and elevated levels of certain hormones expose you to more dips in blood sugar, and make blood sugar balance harder to achieve.
At the same time if your blood sugar spikes too high too frequently your energy will also be unstable.
Many women enter into pregnancy with high blood sugar or undiagnosed prediabetes.
Managing your blood sugar protects you from developing gestational diabetes, miscarrying and decreases your risk of inflammation and infection.
If you suffer from high blood sugar, purchase Blood Sugar Support.
4. Your thyroid hormone levels may be imbalanced.
Pregnancy adds to your body's thyroid load.
During the first trimester of pregnancy, baby relies on the mother's thyroid. Having low or high levels of thyroid hormone can make you feel tired, bloated, and constipated. This is because your thyroid hormones are affected by your gut health as well.
It can also increase water retention, negatively affect your mood, cause anxiety, depression and much more.
Considering the amount of research that point to thyroid's importance in neurological development and the severe consequences of not addressing thyroid dysfunction in the first trimester, it is puzzling why OBGYN's and family planning doctors don't take precautionary measures to educate momma's about the importance of healthy thyroid function.
For that reason, I formulated my Prenatal and Beyond supplement to include nutrients that support the thyroid, like selenium and iodine, which are both essential elements necessary for the healthy functioning of your thyroid gland. Your thyroid needs iodine and selenium in order to make hormones.
And if you suspect you really do have a thyroid hormone imbalance purchase Thyroid Support.
In Summary...
Just like with other conditions, women are told that "not feeling good" is something to expect and look forward to experiencing -- because it's all just a part of being pregnant.
The problem with this is that it sets women up to be left without proper prenatal care and it increase the chances of hormone imbalances, nutrient deficienses, miscarriages, preterm labor or low-birth-weight babies.
More, women have a harder time recovering postpartum.
If you're feeling tired, experiencing extreme fatigue and low energy, throwing up excessively, have headaches, poor concentration, and etc, I invite you to find more ways to support your body during pregnancy.
Because creating a new human from scratch, building the placenta, cranking up your hormone production, making and pumping more blood, adjusting to changes in blood pressure and heart rate, and the stress of planning for a new addition to the family - all these make pregnancy a true marathon for the body!
I know that nature did not intend for pregnant women to suffer.
I also doubt our ancestors or women in societies where it is customary to have eight to ten kids are tired most of their adult lives because they are either pregnant or breastfeeding.
Instead, I found that there are many reasons for fatigue other than natural physical processes that demand the body’s resources.
Take care, love, peace and health,
- Shavonne