Guest guest Posted January 2, 2004 Report Share Posted January 2, 2004 I sent a post a few months back about my elevated blood sugar. Turns out I have a new disease called 1.5 diabetes, also known as LADA or late-onset autoimmune diabetes of adults. Type 1.5 involves beta (insulin producing) cell destruction and dependence on insulin like type 1 as well as the type 2 issue of insulin resistance, which is a problem in hyperT anyway. Graves is a major risk factor for LADA. This type of diabetes has a long (months to years) " prediabetes " stage which is where I'm at with it. I'm trying to get enrolled in a clinical trial for a drug that is supposed to arrest or reverse beta cell destruction. I am also considering low doses of insulin so that the remaining beta cells don't have to work as hard which is supposed to cut down on the immune system's attack on them. I bring all this up because I feel very lucky that I found out about this very early in the disease process and may avoid life-long dependence on insulin. As I mentioned, I found a high blood sugar on my partner's glucose meter. So if you're hyperT, find someone who has a glucose meter (or you can buy one, they're not very expensive) and check your blood sugar an hour or so after a carbohydrate-rich meal. Apparently normal people rarely if ever go above 120 and almost always are below 100. Alternatively, you can get a fasting glucose test (mine is currently at the high end of normal around 100 mg/dl) or an oral glucose tolerance test at a lab (mine was 155 at 2 hours which is in the prediabetic range). If anything seems high, get your GAD levels (an antibody, forget what it stands for) tested as that's the hallmark of LADA. Finding out early about LADA seems to be a very good thing. Ugh, just what I need, another autoimmune endocrine disease... Nissa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 3, 2004 Report Share Posted January 3, 2004 Hi Nissa, Thanks for posting that. My endo did suggest to me I would be at some risk of getting diabetes, as some of my family have it. I will get the GP (general doc) to do a test for my blood sugar when I see him next week. Kitty > I sent a post a few months back about my elevated blood sugar. Turns out I > have a new disease called 1.5 diabetes, also known as LADA or late- onset > autoimmune diabetes of adults. Type 1.5 involves beta (insulin producing) > cell destruction and dependence on insulin like type 1 as well as the type 2 > issue of insulin resistance, which is a problem in hyperT anyway. Graves is > a major risk factor for LADA. > > This type of diabetes has a long (months to years) " prediabetes " stage which > is where I'm at with it. I'm trying to get enrolled in a clinical trial for > a drug that is supposed to arrest or reverse beta cell destruction. I am > also considering low doses of insulin so that the remaining beta cells don't > have to work as hard which is supposed to cut down on the immune system's > attack on them. > > I bring all this up because I feel very lucky that I found out about this > very early in the disease process and may avoid life-long dependence on > insulin. As I mentioned, I found a high blood sugar on my partner's glucose > meter. So if you're hyperT, find someone who has a glucose meter (or you can > buy one, they're not very expensive) and check your blood sugar an hour or > so after a carbohydrate-rich meal. Apparently normal people rarely if ever > go above 120 and almost always are below 100. Alternatively, you can get a > fasting glucose test (mine is currently at the high end of normal around 100 > mg/dl) or an oral glucose tolerance test at a lab (mine was 155 at 2 hours > which is in the prediabetic range). If anything seems high, get your GAD > levels (an antibody, forget what it stands for) tested as that's the > hallmark of LADA. Finding out early about LADA seems to be a very good > thing. > > Ugh, just what I need, another autoimmune endocrine disease... > > Nissa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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