Thank you for your reply. It's just as I thought. She is insistant that she has been told she is Type 1. I didn't think so but she cannot be disagreed with. I think she is trying to prove that 'her' diabetes is far more serious than mine (Type 2). It's not a competition!! I've decided to avoid the subject of diabetes altogether when talking to her. I've even told her as much because she has completely different ideas from me. To be honest, I find it upsetting and confusing to be constantly told that my Doctor and Nurse are talking rubbish. She says I hardly have to change my diet at all and should eat plenty of carbs and drink regular fizzy juice and also orange juice. Her present to OH and myself was a box of sugary biscuits and she got annoyed when I said that OH had eaten them. Also grapes are fine - not the advice from my diabetic nurse.Strictly speaking, - no it's not possible. I think she may be confused as she is a Type 2 on insulin, but that does not mean she is now Type 1.
The difference is that a Type 1 is autoimmune, and has never been a Type 2. In some Type 2's however, they may require insulin as diabetes progresses.
Another scenario is where an initial Type 1 or adult onset person with diabetes was misdiagnosed as a Type 2, then correctly diagnosed , but they would have always been insulin dependent from the outset.
In short, Type 1 is not a progression from Type 2, it's a completely different condition.
Signy
Thank you for your reply. It's just as I thought. She is insistant that she has been told she is Type 1. I didn't think so but she cannot be disagreed with. I think she is trying to prove that 'her' diabetes is far more serious than mine (Type 2). It's not a competition!! I've decided to avoid the subject of diabetes altogether when talking to her. I've even told her as much because she has completely different ideas from me. To be honest, I find it upsetting and confusing to be constantly told that my Doctor and Nurse are talking rubbish. She says I hardly have to change my diet at all and should eat plenty of carbs and drink regular fizzy juice and also orange juice. Her present to OH and myself was a box of sugary biscuits and she got annoyed when I said that OH had eaten them. Also grapes are fine - not the advice from my diabetic nurse.
Decided to leave her to it.....she can eat what she wants and I will follow the advice and guidelines from my own doctor.
In theory you could first get the slowly misbehaving pancreas of type two and at a later stage develop antibodies typical of type one, couldn't you?Strictly speaking, - no it's not possible. I think she may be confused as she is a Type 2 on insulin, but that does not mean she is now Type 1.
The difference is that a Type 1 is autoimmune, and has never been a Type 2. In some Type 2's however, they may require insulin as diabetes progresses.
Another scenario is where an initial Type 1 or adult onset person with diabetes was misdiagnosed as a Type 2, then correctly diagnosed , but they would have always been insulin dependent from the outset.
In short, Type 1 is not a progression from Type 2, it's a completely different condition.
Signy
In theory you could first get the slowly misbehaving pancreas of type two and at a later stage develop antibodies typical of type one, couldn't you?
........something wrong with the information? Oh yeah that'll be like the hospital telling me I'm a onsie and the GP's diabetes nurse insisting I'm a twosie. Hopefully they'll agree on something at some point in the not too distant future.In theory - I suppose you could, stranger things have happened !I'm sure that there is a name for this occurrence if it happens
Though I can't help but think that if people are genuinely confused or mistaken about what they have, any condition at all not just diabetes, there's something wrong with the information they received. .
Or else they receive perfectly adequate information and just don't understand .
Or....just enjoy being annoying and awkward like my Aunt
Signy
........something wrong with the information? Oh yeah that'll be like the hospital telling me I'm a onsie and the GP's diabetes nurse insisting I'm a twosie. Hopefully they'll agree on something at some point in the not too distant future.
I was sent to the Acute Medical Unit. AMU gave me insulin from the start. GP's nurse just looked me up and down and said "I think you're type 2".Same here urbanracer.
Consultant at hospital got GAD and C-pep results and said immediately that I was LADA / autoimmune but because I didn't need to take insulin immediately my GP surgery refused to list me as type 1 and listed me as type 2 instead on their system.
Consultant found out and wasn't happy so got it changed!
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