Hi. It's the same as Late onset T1 which is T1 that appears later in life aka LADA. It's different names for essentially the same thing. Commonly LADA comes on more slowly with a honeymoon period as it appears to reflect slower decay in the beta cells than in children. One aspect which I personally challenge is the assumption that they are all due to antibodies and I've seen some posters on another forum say if it wasn't caused by antibodies then it's T2 which is pretty silly. Viruses are one known cause of beta cell death (I suspect for various reasons that mine was) and you could even argue that the viruses trigger antibodies but who cares as the end result is beta cell destruction with the longer term need for insulin. Sadly the recent changes in diabetes condition definitions have not corrected any of these silly aspects of naming.
Hi, I was originally diagnosed as T2 in 2007, age 52, but after lifestyle changes and meds, not the improvement they expected. Also diagnosed with Hypothyroidism at the same time. Went onto insulin almost a year later and found out through a comment in a letter from the hospital DSN that he considered me T1, or to be more precise T1.5, because of my sensitivity to insulin. Went on a DAFNE course and when we had a session with a consultant, asked if I was likely to get Parkinsons like my Dad, and was told no, but I can blame him for my diabetes - all autoimmune conditions. I was also told it developed probably as a result of a virus. As the GP surgery still had me as T2 and seemed reluctant to change it, I asked the hospital for a cPeptide test (I think it's called) and that confirmed the T1 diagnosis. Hope that helps!
DAFNE is every day for a week Sammi - but it is the most valuable week you can ever wish to spend, should you wish to have really good control of your diabetes.
Ah see this is going to be an issue for me I cannot afford that amount of time off work. I understand it is very important and people say your health is more important etc but I literally cannot afford to lose such a large amount of my wage. They suggested a day course to me I'm not sure what this is.
However, there is no legal right to paid time off for appointments. Your employer has to make reasonable adjustments, but that doesn't mean they have to pay you.Sorry - you should not need to use holiday entitlement for hospital appointments - please telephone the DUK helpline as soon as you can after the holiday weekend because that is Not On.
Hi. My symptoms came on very quickly and I had the complete set. I had been losing weight unexpectedly despite the gym which in retrospect was a warning sign. I never did get the right diagnosis and am still listed wrongly as T2. I gave up with my GP and had GAD and c-peptide tests done privately. The GAD was negative but the c-peptide result was at the bottom of the normal range which confirmed my insulin level was low. NICE confirms that GAD tests taken a long time after initial diagnosis are very unreliable. My GP refused to accept I was LADA and refused insulin. A year later she said I needed it (what a surprise) and have had super DNs since. My concern is that the national statistics are messed up with up to 20% of thin T2s possibly being LADA and not T2 and this affects research studies.Ahhh I see, my symptoms progressed within a week. They originally suspected T1 I was placed straight on insulin then they said they had run a GAD antibodies test which was negative (hospital has told me since they never took the test) and change my diagnosis to T2 basically has been a year or me in and out of hospital with ketone issues, ops on abscesses and permanent hyperglycaemia until may this year. That's where I was confused as my symptoms literally came out of nowhere no issues previous, no family history etc. Only picked up there was an issue as I was urinated constantly and drinking excessively for about a week so I dipped my urine at work and asked someone to check my BG after finding ketones and glucose in my urine which came back 17. How long were your symptoms and how did you eventually get the correct diagnosis?
c-peptide result was at the bottom of the normal range
Yes, but the 'normal' range is quite wide with a 4:1 ratio top to bottom so being towards the bottom probably means low insulin which my uncontrollable BS indicated. I was certainly producing some insulin but I gather even long-term T1s can sometimes have some beta cell activity. The thing about c-peptide is that if you are a 'normal' T2 your results might be towards to top end so it can be useful in differentiating between insulin resistance (T2) and low insulin (T1)Isn't the bottom of normal still normal though? Presumably that's why they have a range because not everyone's is going to be exactly the same.