Northerner
Admin (Retired)
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
I have a question of my own. If a person is diagnosed for the first time at 16, would they have been T1 from birth or is it something that suddenly comes on (like it does with T2) and what sort of symptoms would have prompted diagnosis at 16
Lairy x
Well, obviously I can't speak for Scouser and how she was diagnosed, but Type 1 normally manifests itself very quickly, often within days, and can have very severe symptoms. Type 1 usually have a genetic predisposition that is triggered by some unknown event or environmental factor. It seems that the older you are when diagnosed the longer it may take for symptoms to become acute. A Type 2, on the other hand, may remain undiagnosed for ten years or more as their body's ability to control blood sugar levels gradually declines - often the symptoms are explained away by other things, often just 'getting older'.
Symptoms are similar - peeing a lot, extreme thirst and hunger, inexplicable weight-loss (sometimes also in Type 2). I forget the figure, but a high proportion of Type 1s are diagnosed when they are rushed to hospital with DKA (diabetic ketoacidosis), which is potentially life-threatening.