GuidingSenses
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 117
- Type of diabetes
- LADA
- Treatment type
- Insulin
It doesn't make much of a difference, as far as medical science knows at the moment. The important part is positive or negative, and being clearly positive you have a clear diagnosis now.However she didn’t explain what that high GAD means?
That's interesting. The nurse asked me the same thing. I also lost my mum 3 years ago so that could be a trigger. I think the menopause was another factor. Good luck on your journey and be kind to yourself.Thanks for this. It’s not sunk in really yet pleased it’s black and white now. If I can manage it and not put on any more weight (as I had lost 3 stone) yet I’ve put on 7 pounds this last week.
So I’m not producing insulin suddenly at this age? I got diagnosed coeliac only 2 years ago too and the nurse said a traumatic experience can bring these auto immune disorders out! Yes I lost mum a few years ago so that could be the trauma. Anyone else had similar?
I think it has always been fairly common in adults but GPs automatically labelled it T2 as mine did. It's only fairly recently that the two tests GAD and C-Peptide have been available anyway so people like me are called 'slim-T2s'. I did have a C-peptide done privately so I know my insulin is low.I was 43. No other autoimmune conditions and none in the family. I did a session with a nurse who was running a trial on genetic indicators and had to answer a questionnaire about illnesses I'd had in recent years - nothing more than a cold. Also no traumatic events. So a bit of a mystery really.
My hba1c on diagnosis was 147 and GAD antibodies were around your level. 3 years later and my pancreas is still occasionally spluttering into life and I get the odd week where I have to dial back massively on my insulin requirements.
Apparently its getting a lot more common in adults >40 but no one really understands why.
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