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- 9,269
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- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
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@Ellington do not rely on AI , it regularly churns out incorrect / disinformation. That's why AI usage is against forum rules on the forum.I was 65. Full blown T1, wham. The only good news about that is that I didn't have to deal with this tightrope existence all my life.
Some interesting points here: AI doesn't suggest that the age of onset of T1 is getting older but that the rate of incidence is increasing between 3-5% every year worldwide.
I have attributed by own diabetes to a strange virus I picked up in Africa. Interesting that people here have linked it to a very stressful event.
That’s so interesting and have never heard the ENT thing before, I was diagnosed aged 26 a year post having my tonsils removed.There was a discussion on the “traumatic event” leading up to a T1 diagnosis.
When I was diagnosed as a kid. My mum thought it was “attributed” to a fall down a flight of stairs??
It is said it is an “autoimmune response attacking beta cells in the pancreas.
However. One thing came up for others in the discussion, ENT issues just prior. Tonsils & stuff?
Oddly, I did had issues with adenoids & was due for a procedure on them.
But first I was diagnosed with the usual a suspects. weight loss, frequent urination & excessive thirst & the symptoms of DKA..
Hi, hope you’re well..?That’s so interesting and have never heard the ENT thing before, I was diagnosed aged 26 a year post having my tonsils removed.
My money is on your colleague @Melgar . For decades I was ridiculed for attributing my diagnosis to wasp stings, but now it is taken as a possibility.Interesting re the traumatic event triggering T1. An old colleague of mine was working with his long time work colleague. Whilst at work his colleague was shot dead in front of him. Obviously distraught and in shock he was put on stress leave. Within weeks he developed T1. He asked the endocrinologist treating him if the stress had brought on T1. The endo insisted it hadn't, but my colleague was convinced it did.
Totally agree!Personally, I wouldn't trust anything generated by AI, particularly for something like this where definitions have changed and are changing, and the amount of rubbish about diabetes on the internet appears infinite.
Bilous and Donnelly in the Handbook of Diabetes (5th ed, published in 2021) say
A steady increase (2.5–3% per annum) in the incidence of type 1 diabetes has been reported worldwide, especially among young children <4 years old. There are large differences between countries in the incidence of type 1 diabetes, e.g up to 10‐fold differences among European countries.
I'd strongly suspect that a ten-fold difference between countries might have a lot more to do with failure to identify and diagnose than an actual incidence difference. If you're not actively looking for something it's probable you won't find it - so a system assumption that T1 is mostly diagnosed in children will be confirmed by the system only looking for T1 in children.
That’s exactly what happened to me at the age of 14 in the mid 80s and all around me thought my symptoms especially weight loss were due to grief. It was a tough time and still is sometimes especially as the close relative was also type 1 and of a young adult age. It still gets me down but I live my life and am thankful I am here to enjoy it and do my best to be positive .My traumatic event was the sudden death of a close relative. Completely blindsided me. I had to deal with that loss on top of my family trauma dumping on me in the months following it. I don't recall experiencing any issues with my eyes, throat, or ears at that time. But I was never given the chance to properly process my grief, so I have to wonder if that ultimately caused my body to turn on itself. According to the doctors, they traced my diabetes development back to just under three months prior to my diagnosis, which I recall I (unknowingly, because I had no knowledge about diabetes as a whole back then) started experiencing hyperglycaemia symptoms; constant thirst and hunger, frequent urination, weight loss, all of which I ignorantly explained away to be the result of either the warm weather at the time or my unresolved grief. But what ended up tipping me off and sending me to my GP was an allergy rash developing across my abdomen in the third month, which I now suspect was actually my body's way of warning me that something was wrong, because I have no medical history of allergies. It's crazy how your body can react to certain things sometimes.
I believe that is an important point, like all other autoimmune disorders, you also have to have the genetic component. A close relative with T1 raises the possibility of having the same genetic risk. No genetic susceptibility no T1 . Of course, you can also have the genetic susceptibility, but never develop T1 regardless of stress triggers.That’s exactly what happened to me at the age of 14 in the mid 80s and all around me thought my symptoms especially weight loss were due to grief. It was a tough time and still is sometimes especially as the close relative was also type 1 and of a young adult age. It still gets me down but I live my life and am thankful I am here to enjoy it and do my best to be positive .
Agreed. My maternal granddad was Type 1. His children never developed Type 1 diabetes, but it could have easily been passed into my genetics. I was also born two months premature due to being a pre-eclampsia baby, which the DSNs told me put me at risk of developing Type 1 diabetes as well. I do still believe the loss of my relative ultimately triggered my diagnosis, but I also think my genetics and birth circumstances contributed because of the combined risk factors.I believe that is an important point, like all other autoimmune disorders, you also have to have the genetic component. A close relative with T1 raises the possibility of having the same genetic risk. No genetic susceptibility no T1 . Of course, you can also have the genetic susceptibility, but never develop T1 regardless of stress triggers.
Personally, I wouldn't trust anything generated by AI, particularly for something like this where definitions have changed and are changing, and the amount of rubbish about diabetes on the internet appears infinite.
Bilous and Donnelly in the Handbook of Diabetes (5th ed, published in 2021) say
A steady increase (2.5–3% per annum) in the incidence of type 1 diabetes has been reported worldwide, especially among young children <4 years old. There are large differences between countries in the incidence of type 1 diabetes, e.g up to 10‐fold differences among European countries.
I'd strongly suspect that a ten-fold difference between countries might have a lot more to do with failure to identify and diagnose than an actual incidence difference. If you're not actively looking for something it's probable you won't find it - so a system assumption that T1 is mostly diagnosed in children will be confirmed by the system only looking for T1 in children.
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