Very interesting. I had hepatitis (not A, B, C, D or however far through the alphabet they’ve got now!) as a complication of glandular fever when I was 21! Turned a not very flattering shade of yellow!
Indeed, I have several predisposing factors, shift work, gall bladder surgeries x 3, carpal tunnel syndrome and now hepatitis to name a few! No family history at all! But no point in dwelling on it, I can’t turn the clock back so am just dealing with it in the best way I can.So about the only thing that my relative had going, compared to many other diabetics, is that he knew exactly what caused the disease! If you think about it though, that is not much comfort. Thinking about his condition helped me to come to terms with my own T2D, whose "cause" will probably never be fully known. It made me realize how unimportant the "cause" issue was, going forward!
Thankyou @SimonCrox. I am puzzled by the case of my relative but if that's what his doctors told him, so be it. He told me he is controlling the condition with meds (no insulin) and that he does not pay much attention to diet. It is his life and he seems in good rude health to me!
Totally agree. From a pragmatic point of view, if the treatment is working without harm, good news. But it is still interesting (generally not good to be "interesting", but seems OK here!)
Best wishes
There has been quite a lot in science about the prevalence of adult onset type 1 diabetes and acknowledgment that many assumed type 2 have actually turned out to be type 1.A good question.
If hepatitis in Egypt, probably hep A from food etc and much less likely Hep B/C from blood / sexual transmission. Other viruses cause hepatitis. Viral hepatitis does not generally lead to viral pancreatitis, although when the cause of pancreatitis is not known (gallstones, alcohol, drugs, sky high triglyceride levels), one generally invokes a viral cause. If someone has pancreatitis, they generally know about it.
So the hepatits is unlikely to have caused pancreatitis to cause the diabetes.
Also, as you imply, it is said that diabetes due to pancreatitis, (I have used the old name of secondary diabetes, but folk here use the new name of type 3c), needs insulin, and oral agens do not work.
We are presuming that the reli had hepatitis (inflammation of liver) with liver function tests showing a hepatitic picture, rather than a picture of biliary obstruction.
There are rare conditions with hepatitis and pancreatic damage such as haemachromatosis (bronzed diabetes), but they are rare as hens teeth, and they would have been found by now.
Every now and then, there is a paper showing that Type 1 has been triggered off by a viral infection and I am fairly sure that there is a hepatitis virus paper, but this is T1DM, not T2DM
Best wishes
There has been quite a lot in science about the prevalence of adult onset type 1 diabetes and acknowledgment that many assumed type 2 have actually turned out to be type 1.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?