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Understanding how T1 is passed to children!?
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<blockquote data-quote="ExtremelyW0rried" data-source="post: 1722733" data-attributes="member: 429908"><p>I am t1, my dad is t1 and I believe my daughter is also in the early stage of developing t1. For some families it is very generic - there are families where two or three children and a parent all have t1 - others it appears once and not again. </p><p>There was no one before my dad. </p><p>However I think once it's multi generational it is onviously strongly genetic so I suppose I had a high chance that one or both my own children would develop it. </p><p>I do wish my parents hadn't had me and I do wish I hadn't had my own children. It would have stopped it being passed on any further. </p><p></p><p>It's personal choice though. Most people who are t1 have children who are absolutely fine.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ExtremelyW0rried, post: 1722733, member: 429908"] I am t1, my dad is t1 and I believe my daughter is also in the early stage of developing t1. For some families it is very generic - there are families where two or three children and a parent all have t1 - others it appears once and not again. There was no one before my dad. However I think once it's multi generational it is onviously strongly genetic so I suppose I had a high chance that one or both my own children would develop it. I do wish my parents hadn't had me and I do wish I hadn't had my own children. It would have stopped it being passed on any further. It's personal choice though. Most people who are t1 have children who are absolutely fine. [/QUOTE]
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