more here: http://www.internalmedicinenews.com...=98&tx_ttnews[tt_news]=15998&cHash=da03e20e36"In our clinic, the biggest surprise for our internal medicine residents and our endocrine fellows is how many of our patients are diagnosed after the age of 20. It's a lot. I can't say exactly, but it's easily over a quarter of our type 1 patients who are diagnosed after age 20," said Dr. Hirsch.
The age record at the Seattle clinic is held by a patient who presented at age 92 with newly diagnosed, autoantibody-positive type 1 diabetes and a history of Graves disease and vitiligo
'Among males there were twin peaks in incidence: one at age 10-14, and a second at age 45-49.'
My son was 47 also when he was diagnosed as T1I was 47.....
Yes it appears to be a continuous spectrum. The beta cells die in the pancreas at differing rates and for different (as yet unknown) reasons: at any age; with clustering of rapid beta cell death at certain ages with particular triggers.
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