all my fault i miss read the thread soz![]()
It doesn't make it any easier to deal with but at least I know it wasn't my "fault", I will take great exception with anyone who suggests otherwise.![]()
I find the suggestion that my type 2 diagnoses was only a matter of time due to my poor diet and excercise quite irritating and annoying.
No your fine caz lol xx
can I ask just the curiosity in me really , why have certain posts in this thread been deleted??????????
I was wondering this myself!🙂Bev
Discretion Bev & Steff, discretion!😉
Discretion Bev & Steff, discretion!😉
Andy, I am capable of being discreet - I am just a little puzzled as to why my comment was taken off this thread, as I was only answering your question. As you are a relative newcomer and perhaps didnt know the background of why people are a little wary (sp?) of some comments that Peter makes and has made in the past, resulting in him being banned for 1 week at one point. He is quite knowlegable about lots of things , but sometimes has a way of putting his foot in it and upsetting people.
Peter, I would still like to know where you have read this 'theory' about 'reverse hereditary' as I have researched it some more and cant find any reference to it? I would be interested in any links you have on this subject. Thanks.🙂Bev
Actually if a person has a child with diabetesthey are at slightly increased risk of diabete themselves. There is a well known reverse hereditary aspect to diabetes - a child is dxed with diabetes , the family says we have no trace of it , then some years later an aunt, uncle or parent of the child is dxed with it themselves.At a later stage a grandparent is dxed as well and then the genetic track becomes evident.
REverse hereditary is a fascinating aspect of diabetes, and well researched.
Peter can you send a link to an article explaining *reverse heredity*.
No ? I have no academic references to it now. As I explained earlier I was dxed Type 2 in 1992. I was particularly interested in the genetic background to diabetes being an historian and a genealogist and also because one of my great aunts was the first person to inject insulin way back in the 1920s/30s in town I come from.
In the mid nineties I went down the Central Libarary and the University Library and read up on the hereditary aspects of diabetes in the academic textbooks intended for Docs and Endos etc. A couple of them mentioned this rare aspect of familial T1 diabetes and there were references to research articles on particular families. God knows what the books and articles were called now fifteen years later. It was all in pre-internet days.
I was thinking at the time of doing a diabetic family tree ? getting all the death certificates for my rleatives going back as far as possoible amd possibly looking at old medical records if they were available. A possible ambitious further step would have been to obtain DNA samples from as many of the family group as possible to see if there were any patterns.
I never got round to doing the project ? lack of time, lack of funds, a huge number of relatives and some of the death certificates are disappointing ? they just give the proximate cause of death (heart attack, stroke etc ) when you know those individuals were probably diabetic as well.
Anyway anyone interested in this rare aspect of diabetes would probably need to do the same as I did ? leg it down to an academic library and get the kosher academic textbooks out.
We always expect genetics to work in a forward motion ? grandparents/parents/grandchildren. It is counter intuitive to find that, in a small number of families, the genes express themselves in reverse order.
25% of Type 1 Diabetics are supposed to have family members with it as well, so most T1s probably haven?t got a genetic background anyway.
Actually if a person has a child with diabetesthey are at slightly increased risk of diabete themselves. There is a well known reverse hereditary aspect to diabetes - a child is dxed with diabetes , the family says we have no trace of it , then some years later an aunt, uncle or parent of the child is dxed with it themselves.At a later stage a grandparent is dxed as well and then the genetic track becomes evident.
REverse hereditary is a fascinating aspect of diabetes, and well researched.