Steve14
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 95
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
27 seems to be the magic number. No matter where I look, chances are far greater that an individual with T1D was diagnosed at 27. I'm not even the first to see this pattern, and there was a discussion about this outside this forum. So what is with 27? For a long time I tried to believe that there may be an epigenetic trigger for the onset of T1D; such as an infant born to unhealthy parents, or hidden drug/chemical exposure in a teenager..... or in a middle aged person.
But 27 comes up far too often, and with that I believe the possible explanations can be narrowed down (against us, unfortunately, since it's VERY unlikely to have an environmental trigger for so many at the same random age that is "well into" adulthood). I wonder if there were any studies done for adults at age 25-30 regarding having the "most stressful times of their lives", getting settled down, starting a family, doing less exercise, worse eating habits, stress and more stress etc.
Coming from a family with no history of T1D makes this even more frustrating, but I know I'm not alone, and not the only one receiving a diagnosis at 27. What are your thoughts about this?
But 27 comes up far too often, and with that I believe the possible explanations can be narrowed down (against us, unfortunately, since it's VERY unlikely to have an environmental trigger for so many at the same random age that is "well into" adulthood). I wonder if there were any studies done for adults at age 25-30 regarding having the "most stressful times of their lives", getting settled down, starting a family, doing less exercise, worse eating habits, stress and more stress etc.
Coming from a family with no history of T1D makes this even more frustrating, but I know I'm not alone, and not the only one receiving a diagnosis at 27. What are your thoughts about this?