- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
- Pronouns
- He/Him
It does seem that once you have one autoimmune condition you are more likely to pick up another one unfortunately 
Granuloma annulare
Blimey. Red hair is carried on a gene that is autosomal recessive, so you need both parents with that recessive gene to produce a red haired child. It's much commoner in Celtic populations, the irish are the leaders with 10% of the population, Scotland comes second. Edinburgh is the capital of Red Hair in Scotland. So what is your inheritance - Paddy or Jock?
Fascinating! I was diagnosed at 42 with no diabetes in the family (but a fairly long list of other annoying illnesses throughout my life such as asthma, vertigo and a propensity to catch any bug/ virus that I come into contact with!).
The women in my family tend to live into their 90s. My Nan was one of 9 and Grandad was one of 11. She lived until she was 93, and most of her sisters lived into their 80s (one is still going strong in her late 90s!) but Grandad was a coal miner from the age of about 15 and suffered from all of the illnesses associated with that noble, yet grim profession and died when he was in his 60s. On the other side Grandmother lived into her late 80s and her Dad lived until he was 97 (fought in WWI when he was 32 - lying about his age - and was alive when I was born!) The only autoimmune disease that we are aware of in the family is an aunt with ulcerative colitis.
In terms of redheads, my wife has beautiful red hair, something her brother who has jet black hair has teased her about since they were little. The rest of her immediate family don't have her hair or pale skin. There is Scottish lineage on her fathers side, with the odd redhead 'popping out' in every other generation. I was hoping our daughter would have the same hair colour, she was born with bright red hair, but at 3 years old it is a dark blonde. Thankfully we have found that she can tolerate the sun (unlike my wife!)
Allergies I think come under a sort of autoimmune response because it’s your own body attacking itself causing symptoms but not in the same way as an actual autoimmune disease (usually kicked off by a viral infection where the immune system T cells work to kill the infection but then goes a bit over the top and attacks and kills healthy cells ie Pancreas Beta cells in T1) that attack and kill off certain systems totally. I may be wrong... don’t quote me!Father - LADA
Me - LADA
Uncle and a daughter with SLE
Lots of thyroid disease in family, I have Hashimotos
Vitiligo (other daughter)
RA (grandmother, cousin)
Plus lots of allergies, don’t know if they count as autoimmune?
Apparently Norwegian vikings went to Ireland in 793, Danish viks stuck to England and Scotland mostly. I’m rubbish at history so this might not be totally correct. I’m a ginge, so is mum (Irish) and sister and my dad (Scottish) his mum was a ginge. Gingerness although lovely has a f load to answer for!Full fall Paddy. There's county load on my father's side. but mother's brother really looks like an extra from the Kirk Douglas film, The Vikings. Hmmm, I wonder if there were some long boat marauders in Ireland?
At least with T1 we can hope to manage it as best we can.... Cancer however is a bstard child all of its own. Thankyou for your reply TrophyWench x Oh and Btw and this may not be true at all but I read somewhere that people with autoimmune disease have less incidence of cancer possibly because of our naturally over reactive immune system. Might there possibly be a major perk to having autoimmune diabetes?! I have very little cancer in my family... 2 cases of prostate cancer, 1 case of breast cancer all on my mums side. Irish on my mums side so a very large family.My big sis was a ginge and so apparently was our paternal grandma - however me the dark haired one got the T1. (OTOH ma, pa and sis all had cancer and so far, I haven't.)
It does seem that once you have one autoimmune condition you are more likely to pick up another one unfortunately![]()