I am type 1 diabetic since 2006 and wanted to expose a theory that I have been developing for some time.
Notice: I only expose my own thinking so that people with much more knowledge who visit this forum can develop it a little more.I am neither doctor, nor scientist nor this is some advance ...
The theme focuses on the group of streptococcus bacteria of Group A and specifically of the Pyogenes Streptococcus.You can find information at Link
It is a bacterium, very common on the planet, which infects children and adults and can produce from a common throat infection, otitis or sinusitis to rheumatic fever, shock or various very serious diseases.
The fact is that this bacteria grows easily in crops but has the peculiarity that is inhibited with an excess of glucose.And here comes the important ... It is a streptococcus that easily infects us, which we have surely been exposed, and as such, our body has responded to such a threat.It is possible that this response from our immune system in the face of an infection due to this pyogenes was the increase in glucose and to get it attack on insulin producing cells so that it cannot stabilize blood glucose.Once the bacteria is eliminated, the antibodies continue to maintain for a possible future attack.
I remember that in August 2005 I spent a couple of days with a ruling fever and on September 1, 2006 entered through hospital emergencies with 400 sugar.Maybe it has nothing to do or perhaps the trigger was.
I put on my theory why children in the DB1 debut, which this bacterium will possibly exist since there is diabetes and I myself had a feverish process (which does not demonstrate anything, eye) a year before my debut.
Anyway, that's all, I hope it can help this reflection to eradicate this disease.
@ss1 I love your theory, it is good that we question the why ... here I give you more information so that you have just reflected it.;)
The truth is that little is known about the causes of type 1 diabetes ... especially interesting it seems to me that can be detected from 6 months of life./:)
ss1 said: hello ... well you know that I have been spinning something like that? I spent three years that I had angina every month and a half.The last angina I had them last year in January and I started with urine infections until in August the diabetes discovered me
I am type 1 diabetic since 2006 and wanted to expose a theory that I have been developing for some time.
Notice: I only expose my own thinking so that people with much more knowledge who visit this forum can develop it a little more.I am neither doctor, nor scientist nor this is some advance ...
The theme focuses on the group of streptococcus bacteria of Group A and specifically of the Pyogenes Streptococcus.You can find information at Link
It is a bacterium, very common on the planet, which infects children and adults and can produce from a common throat infection, otitis or sinusitis to rheumatic fever, shock or various very serious diseases.
The fact is that this bacteria grows easily in crops but has the peculiarity that is inhibited with an excess of glucose.And here comes the important ... It is a streptococcus that easily infects us, which we have surely been exposed, and as such, our body has responded to such a threat.It is possible that this response from our immune system in the face of an infection due to this pyogenes was the increase in glucose and to get it attack on insulin producing cells so that it cannot stabilize blood glucose.Once the bacteria is eliminated, the antibodies continue to maintain for a possible future attack.
I remember that in August 2005 I spent a couple of days with a ruling fever and on September 1, 2006 entered through hospital emergencies with 400 sugar.Maybe it has nothing to do or perhaps the trigger was.
I put on my theory why children in the DB1 debut, which this bacterium will possibly exist since there is diabetes and I myself had a feverish process (which does not demonstrate anything, eye) a year before my debut.
Anyway, that's all, I hope it can help this reflection to eradicate this disease.
Wow ... it's already a coincidence ... I am very clear that the culprit of our debut must be a bacterium ... I add something else ... most of type 1 diabetes debuts are of children ... and isdisease exists since the world is world ... Therefore, if it was transmitted by genes, since the natural selection had eradicated diabetes, in short, a child is impossible for the disease to transmit future generations because inThe moment of its debut would only survive a month or two without treatment ... if this disease were only genetic many years ago that nobody had remained that transmitted it ... instead a specific response could be inherited to a bacterium ...If our immune system has that pre -installed response because it will use it the best you can when you need it, either with two, twelve or forty years starting a debut, if you do not need it, it will go to another generation ... and perhaps without that answerThat bacterium will produce a greater damage to our body ... Ufff goes paragraph ... more concentrated than three seasons of the game of thrones .... I return: what I think is that if this continues today happening after so many thousands ofYears it is because it must be a defense of our bodies to a primitive external agent.And the pyogenes Streptocococcus bacteria is clear that it causes autoimmune responses in the brain, the heart ... and why not in insulin production if we know that an excess of glucose inhibits it? All the best...
Genetic predisposition and a virus infection such as triggering, it is already proven, it could also be for other infections. It is under some preventive vaccine ..