Absobloodylutely... I Agree. Also a great sense of humour combats the disease!! Lol!! ThanksMine came about after some emotional trauma and a high stress situation. I'm convinced it had a lot to do with 'adrenal fatigue' a subject that's getting more air time now but not when i was diagnosed, it leads to all types of hormonal issues, damage to the endocrine system, too much cortisol in the body, lack of seretonin. We live in a society that is plagued by chronic stress. I heard on bbc radio 4 recently that advertisers used to use sex to sell products, this has now changed dramatically, and now they use 'terror' as their new marketing strategy, 'terror' sells. So we are all placed into an environment where we are subjected to high level of chronic stress. I see an increase in people globally becoming diabetic and the news getting more dramatic and charged with wall to wall war journalism, violence and other pretty nasty business. Now i tend to turn the news off and look for things that will lower my stress levels, so i use self hypnosis cds, and positive affirmation techniques, i could go on. So what causes diabetes? ... imo... just being human, toxins in the environment, the flaws in our genetic make up, globalization, the food we eat, a predisposition to high anxiety influenced by an Orwellian dystopia, the immorality of pharmo companies, oh... and global warming and hairdressers
That is so interesting, as I though I had hand foot mouth a few months ago, as feet and hands were peeling badly, red and itchy, losing layers of skin, no explanation! used some cream from docs and it got better, I've not had diabetes for more than 3 months my nurse says, so this may be my reason??? Halleluah!!The autoimmune reason is the main one, but bear in mind injury and acute pancreatitis can all result in the destruction of the pancreas.
The auto immune pathway as I understand it (research scientist, immunology dabbler, but not an expert). When a bug enter your body, you have a whole suite of specialist immune cells involved in triggering an immune response. The early part of the immune response is called the innate response and the innate immune cells are essentially pre-programmed with markers on the cell surface to recognise specific germs. The innate response drives the generation of a vigorous and specific acquired immune response which cleasr the infection from your body. How you respond to an infection depends on what range of markers you have on your innate cells. This is why some people are able to respond very well to, for example flu, whereas other can't (and can die). These markers are very important in determining how you will respond to specific infections and they are linked to auto-immunity. A number of surface markers (proteins) arrayed on the surface of natural killer cells (important cells in the innate response) have been identified as associated with type 1 diabetes. In addition, there are many other marker on many other cell type have also been identified, so the picture is complicated. The theory as I understand it is when you respond to an infection, your immune response can go off course and you can develop antibodies that cross-react and bind the beta insulin producing cells rather than the invading infection (hand, foot and mouth coxackie virus, is often associated with triggering diabetes) and targets the cells for destruction by a cytotoxic T-cells (cell killing cells). This may be because you respond in a certain way to an infection because of these pre-programmed markers but also environmental factors, disease exposure, diet, stress and probably many other reasons, that all work in concert to generate a bad immune response. So the whole picture is very complicated and there is no "one reason" as to why an individual develops diabetes.
I am not sure when my diabetes began exactly. My trigger was possibly pregnancy or the two bouts of hand foot and mouth I was exposed to. I is hard to know.That is so interesting, as I though I had hand foot mouth a few months ago, as feet and hands were peeling badly, red and itchy, losing layers of skin, no explanation! used some cream from docs and it got better, I've not had diabetes for more than 3 months my nurse says, so this may be my reason??? Halleluah!!
I was diagnosed at 28 weeks pregnant so seems that something to do with being pregnant may have triggered it for me.
That's an interesting article Phoenix....it's interesting to read about Sardinia (which is where I'm from). I became diabetic 35 years ago, in 1980 at the age of nine. 1980 is the year where in Sardinia there has been an explosion of T1 diabetes between children. The percentage is still 4 time higher than the percentage in the rest of Italy and no one yet understand the reason. While it is known that the highest percentage of diabetes cases is in northern Europe (I think it is Finland ) it is a mystery why in an island of the Mediterranean (Sardinia ) you've got so many cases and this trend started in 1980.Emmotha , this article discusses clusters but tends to say that they probably are 'coincidence because of the time frames involved.
http://www.joslin.org/info/genetics_and_diabetes.html
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Sounds likely. The focus doesn't seem to be on cause these days but on the exciting possibility of implanting beta cells. My maternal grandmother features in beautiful brown family photos, she died when I was two. It's clear in several photos that she had had goitre. Prior to my T1 diagnosis at age 29, I developed hypothyroidism, I had 'flu, various stressful whammies, and I fell down the stairs, from top to bottom.There are two factors in my diabetes. My mother's side of the family has some form of auto-immune condition (which means it is likely genetic) that has resulted in vitiligo, thyroid issues and diabetes, amongst other things, in various members of the family. Fortunately so far it has been only one of the three per person.
The two of us who have been diagnosed diabetic were both in the 10-15 age group at diagnosis. Both of us are the same familial generation and both of us had had a bad dose of influenza in the 18 months prior to being diagnosed.
We therefore draw conclusions from our small population that we had a genetic predisposition and that the change in T-Cells that caused them to attack Beta cells was triggered by the flu.
But that's just us!
I'm not sure the number of children being diagnosed with type 1 has changed as significantly as the number of children being diagnosed with type 2. What has increased from a t1 point of view, or so it seems, is the number of t1s diagnosed as adults. T1 was always seen as a juvenile onset condition when I was diagnosed.
I'm not sure the number of children being diagnosed with type 1 has changed as significantly as the number of children being diagnosed with type 2. What has increased from a t1 point of view, or so it seems, is the number of t1s diagnosed as adults. T1 was always seen as a juvenile onset condition when I was diagnosed.
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