Type 1 diabetes delayed when parents have type 2

By by anthony j. brown, md
Submitted by rbergman — March 3, 2009 at 8:20 am

rbergman

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Among people who develop type 1 diabetes, the age it starts tends to be later if their parents have type 2 diabetes, Finnish researchers have found.

Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune condition in which the body mistakenly attacks insulin-producing cells, and it usually starts in childhood; type 2 diabetes is a metabolic derangement, often tied to obesity later in life.

Few studies have looked at how a family history of type 2 diabetes impacts the offspring with type 1 disease, according to a report in the medical journal Diabetes Care.

To investigate, Dr. Per-Henrik Groop, from Helsinki University Hospital, and colleagues analyzed data from 1860 patients with type 1 diabetes. About a third of the subjects had parents with type 2 diabetes.

On average, the onset of type 1 diabetes occurred at 17.2 years of age in the group with a family history compared with 16.1 years in the group without parental diabetes.

There doesn't seem to be a clear explanation for this finding, which is unexpected since an inherited risk for diabetes might tend to accelerate rather than retard the onset of type 1 diabetes. The researchers say the possibility that the type 1 diabetics might have actually included some with type 2 diabetes "does not seem to be the answer."

SOURCE: Diabetes Care, January 2009.

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Avera Avera March 3, 2009 at 9:45 pm

Articles such as this one actually let us with Diabetes know that there are people oit there doing all kinds of studies and research to find the answers to questions we need to know. I am glad to know that research concerning family history are finally being considered important.