I never had a BCG because my '6 needles' test was just about positive. (The dots were still there, but barely raised)
Me too. No injection but they did send me for a chest x-ray.I never had a BCG because my '6 needles' test was just about positive. (The dots were still there, but barely raised)
Interesting. My Dad had tests for TB several years after that and they were negative. I lived on a farm but we never ever had any cattle reacting to the TB test, so I am unsure as to where I got it from. I have even wondered if it was from a dead badger that I found when I was out walking with friends. We didn't touch it but we did poke and prod it with sticks lol.Me too. No injection but they did send me for a chest x-ray.
Turned out my dad had TB and I had inherited immunity
My Dad got it when he served in Gibraltar in the war, he recovered in Kelling .. did they call it a sanitorium then ?Interesting. My Dad had tests for TB several years after that and they were negative. I lived on a farm but we never ever had any cattle reacting to the TB test, so I am unsure as to where I got it from. I have even wondered if it was from a dead badger that I found when I was out walking with friends. We didn't touch it but we did poke and prod it with sticks lol.
Interesting. My Dad had tests for TB several years after that and they were negative. I lived on a farm but we never ever had any cattle reacting to the TB test, so I am unsure as to where I got it from. I have even wondered if it was from a dead badger that I found when I was out walking with friends. We didn't touch it but we did poke and prod it with sticks lol.
@Scott-C It's research I was excited about a while ago, but it doesn't seem as promising to me as it first sounded as a cure for Type 1.
I was BCG vaccinated after T1 diagnosis. It didn't cure me then, so I question whether it would now....
Well my younger son needed the BCG jab and the older one had it when he was a baby (cos that's when my dad was ill with some sort of chest complaint that turned out to be nothing much at all) so it's a pity I didn't pass on the immunity any further. Yet again I've failed as a parent.LOL.
It doesn't need to be parents that passed the immunity on. In times past many, many people died from TB. It was rampant among all communities and backgrounds. Our parents may have escaped the disease for whatever reason, or been carriers, but those of us with Victorian grandparents and great parents may well have been passed immunity from them, and unless we study our own genealogy we will never know where it came from..
did they call it a sanitarium then ?
Hi John those unhealthy bits at chip shops were named scrumps where I lived!I had the BCG when 11 years old we were sent down to a local clinic for it and instructed to come straight back to school we of course took it as an opportunity to bunk off for a couple of hours making our way to the local chip shop.For a potato fritter and a bag full of those little bits of batter.
I can still see on my arm the marks left by the 6 needle test.
I once read that TB immunity can be passed down as many as 4 or 5 generations - although it was hearsay, and I can't produce any references for that statement.
The potential implications for T1 must be incredible, but it looks like being a long time from implementing it. And presumably the point at which the BCG is used may end up being crucial, because of our limited ability to regenerate/grow new beta cells.
I really hope this research gets to the point of actually reaching T1s, so much doesn't.
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