As someone with Type 1 diagnosed >50 years ago, you don't fall in to this study for good reason.What a croc of **** that statement is re Lifestyle bring a cause of type 1 diabetes.
Well I wonder what it is in the life style of cats and dogs that causes them to become diabetic, It seems dogs mainly get type1 and cats Type2.
I think vitamin d deficiency might be the trigger, closest as any theory gets really
I think the earlier Sardinia example given kind of debunks that. Also I would have thought in this instance darker skinned people (who absorb less vitamin D from the sun and some of whom cover up to boot and suffer rickets) would have a much higher rate of T1 when moving to northern climes - and I don't think this is the case.I think vitamin d deficiency might be the trigger, closest as any theory gets really
I can't see how it can be lifestyle as my daughter was diagnosed in January just after turning 13. She loved natural green juices and carrot and orange juice every morning for breakfast. She has always been very slim and active but exactly a year to the day previous to diagnosis she was admitted to hospital with a bad virus and took three weeks to recover fully so her diagnosis would be explained better with the theory of a virus and the immune system malfunctioning and attacking her pancreas instead.When you consider that a high % of people are diagnosed as children then it seems impossible that it's triggered by lifestyle.
However personally I think it can be triggered by many factors, so it could be lifestyle related, why though think that it's just one factor ? I know there is a higher incidence of type 1 in northern hemisphere countries, so possible sunshine/vitamin d link, and also people are diagnosed after illness so the attack starts with illness depressing the immune system. Maybe this is where we are going wrong and trying to pinpoint a particular reason rather than many, it's how the immune system responds and perhaps if we focus more on strengthening immune systems then this could prevent many from becoming type 1 ?
I can't see how it can be lifestyle as my daughter was diagnosed in January just after turning 13. She loved natural green juices and carrot and orange juice every morning for breakfast. She has always been very slim and active but exactly a year to the day previous to diagnosis she was admitted to hospital with a bad virus and took three weeks to recover fully so her diagnosis would be explained better with the theory of a virus and the immune system malfunctioning and attacking her pancreas instead.
Saudi Arabia is the country with the third highest incidence of type 1 diabetes; that alone puts doubt on the vit. d theory.I think vitamin d deficiency might be the trigger, closest as any theory gets really
I'm interested in the possibility of vitamin D deficiency being linked type 1. I'm fair skinned and live in the south of New Zealand. My maternal grandfather died of skin cancer and my maternal relations all have lesions removed regularly (2 have had melanoma) . Because of the skin cancer risk I have used sun lotion my entire life. When my sister got MS (which seems to be linked to low vit D), my vit D levels were tested and were found to be very low. I have no proof, but I wonder if my adult onset type 1 is related to vit D deficiency. We all take supplements now. On the bright side- no malignant skin cancers so far.
Hi there I am also intrested in Vitamin D, I was diagnosed with type 1 3years ago, my wife has just been diagnosed with MS and we have noticed when ever she sun baths she feels better! I am also having a lesion removed in 2weeks..Lots of bad things in common with our familys hahaI'm interested in the possibility of vitamin D deficiency being linked type 1. I'm fair skinned and live in the south of New Zealand. My maternal grandfather died of skin cancer and my maternal relations all have lesions removed regularly (2 have had melanoma) . Because of the skin cancer risk I have used sun lotion my entire life. When my sister got MS (which seems to be linked to low vit D), my vit D levels were tested and were found to be very low. I have no proof, but I wonder if my adult onset type 1 is related to vit D deficiency. We all take supplements now. On the bright side- no malignant skin cancers so far.
Agreed! Seeing MS close up makes me realise type 1 ain't so bad really. If only MS sufferers could do a few tests and injections a day and be normal.Hi there I am also intrested in Vitamin D, I was diagnosed with type 1 3years ago, my wife has just been diagnosed with MS and we have noticed when ever she sun baths she feels better! I am also having a lesion removed in 2weeks..Lots of bad things in common with our familys haha
Why is it unhelpful? The fact that it is an autoimmune disorder has no relevance to this discussion. AIDS is also an autoimmune disorder and for some....that could have been avoided.
Furthermore, why is it "Unhelpful" to at least CONSIDER the possibility that type 1 and type 2 are similar in that lifestyle COULD have contributed to the disease for some people while for others it was inevitable? Maybe "Type 1" encompasses many different types of auto-immune diabetes, some of which could have been avoided.
I see nothing wrong with discussing a topic that is largely unproven, and very possibly could be (partially) true.
Very low vitamin D levels in the Saudi population apparently.Saudi Arabia is the country with the third highest incidence of type 1 diabetes; that alone puts doubt on the vit. d theory.
Very low vitamin D levels in the Saudi population apparently.
http://www.arabnews.com/news/519761
I dont subscribe to the unhealthy lifestyle scenario...
Im not sure anyone has mentioned unhealthy lifestyle, certainly not the researchers. Lifestyle does not equal unhealthy lifestyle, although when we hear "lifestyle causes" for a condition we are all pretty well conditioned to think fat & lazy, lifestyle doesn't mean diet & exercise, it means lifestyle, literally everything about our lives now - good stuff, bad stuff everything.
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