Could Your Child Have Diabetes?

More than 15,000 children are diagnosed with type 1 every year. Make sure you know the telltale signs -- they're all too easy to dismiss.
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When Chloe Powell started begging for one more drink of water every night, her father, Charles, thought his then 7-year-old was using a common bedtime stall tactic. "I was irritated that she wouldn't go to sleep," admits Dr. Powell, who's a family physician in Dallas. With all she was drinking, he wasn't surprised when she began wetting the bed. But when Chloe couldn't make it through a conversation without having to use the bathroom, he became concerned. "I figured she had a urinary-tract infection, and she'd take some antibiotics and feel better," says Dr. Powell. He wasn't at all prepared for what his daughter's urine test showed: a dangerously high level of sugar that was a clear indicator of type 1 diabetes. In an instant, Chloe, now 10, went from being a kid who never thought twice about the foods she ate or the energy she burned to one who'd face a lifetime of carbohydrate counting, finger pricks, and insulin injections.

A Disease on the Rise

Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disorder that causes the body's immune system to mistakenly destroy healthy cells in the pancreas that produce the hormone insulin. (Type 2, on the other hand, occurs when the body doesn't respond to the insulin that's being made.) Insulin ensures that sugar (glucose) in the bloodstream gets into the body's cells where it's needed for energy; without insulin, sugar builds up in the blood, which can be deadly. It's important to begin insulin therapy as soon as possible because high blood-sugar levels can cause permanent vision and nerve problems as well as damage to blood vessels, increasing the risk of heart attack, stroke, and kidney disease.

Since the 1980s, the number of kids being diagnosed with type 1 diabetes has gradually crept up at a rate of about 3 to 5 percent per year. That may not sound like much, but it's startling when you consider that twice as many kids are diagnosed with type 1 diabetes today than were diagnosed 20 to 25 years ago. Although the condition can develop at any age, "we're seeing it at younger ages than ever before and more toddlers and preschoolers are being diagnosed," says Parents advisor Lori Laffel, M.D., chief of the pediatric, adolescent, and young adult section at Harvard Medical School's Joslin Diabetes Center. Experts believe that environmental factors like children's reduced exposure to germs may be partly to blame (a theory known as the hygiene hypothesis). "Reduced exposure to early-childhood infections may also alter certain children's immune response, leading to the autoimmune attack on the body's insulin-producing beta cells," says Dr. Laffel. "It could also be that excessive childhood weight may add other stresses to beta cells."

Why some kids get type 1 diabetes is also a mystery. White children and those with a family history of type 1 diabetes are most at risk, but only about 10 percent of those with type 1 diabetes have a family history of the disease. Sometimes, a child develops diabetes after being exposed to a virus like the ones that cause mono (Epstein-Barr) or hand-foot-mouth disease (which includes viruses such as Coxsackie).

Signs of High Blood Sugar

Chloe's unquenchable thirst and frequent urination were classic signs of type 1 diabetes. "Yet even though I'm a doctor, I missed the symptoms in my own daughter," Dr. Powell says. Other symptoms -- including increased appetite, weight loss, lethargy, and irritability -- are easily dismissed as kid quirks or chalked up to growth spurts. "Symptoms come on suddenly and can seem obvious after a child's been diagnosed," says Larry Deeb, M.D., past-president of the American Diabetes Association and director of Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare's Diabetes Center, in Florida. "Parents often say their child wasn't herself for weeks, but they couldn't pinpoint why."

Although blood tests are the most reliable way to diagnose diabetes, your child's doctor may first order a glucose urine test because it's easier to have a kid pee into a cup than to draw her blood. If there's sugar in her urine, a random blood-glucose test (one that doesn't require fasting) can confirm the diagnosis, usually while you're still at the doctor's office. A blood-glucose reading of 200 milligrams per deciliter (mg/dL) or higher indicates your child has diabetes and will need to be given insulin multiple times every day to help her body process glucose. Fortunately, there have been great advancements in managing this lifelong affliction.

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Comments
Comments (10)
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ginnyvandenburg wrote:

This article was great. My husband has been living with Type 1 diabetes since childhood, and it's a very misunderstood disease. This article was accurate and informative! We are always keeping a close eye on our three children for symptoms of diabetes, because there is a very strong history of it in his family. Thank you for such a well-researched article!

4/4/2012 04:38:54 PM Report Abuse
MichLParks wrote:

Thank you. There's really nothing to say that hasn't already been said so, from a type 1 mother (diagnosed in adulthood) of a daughter that has been having some abnormal readings and may be developing it, thank you.

3/6/2012 07:35:31 PM Report Abuse
Drschlock wrote:

I am curious (as a mother of a little one with an uncle and grandfather with Type 1 Diabetes) if any of your children with Type 1 diabetes, got very ill BEFORE symptoms started. there is new information floating around linking diabetes to viral elements. Both of my in-laws were very sick a month or so before their diabetes symptoms started. I'm just curious if anyone else had this experience.

3/6/2012 05:41:07 PM Report Abuse
janettefernandez wrote:

Great article! Like most, and even the doctor/parent in this article, the early symptoms are easy to overlook and attribute to other things. I know I did that with my son and I have a T1 parent. That ah-ha moment when you know something is not truly not right - Hopefully someone will read this article, have that ah-ha moment sooner, not later, and get themselves or their child to the doctor before something truly devastating happens.

3/6/2012 11:24:19 AM Report Abuse
kangel15 wrote:

From the mother of an 8 year old Type 1 Diabetic...THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU! You got all the details correct and very informative!

3/6/2012 10:46:20 AM Report Abuse
mpace199042 wrote:

Thank you, thank you, thank you for getting it right. With so much misinformation out there, it is refreshing to see an accurate article about Type 1 diabetes.

1/17/2012 07:15:13 PM Report Abuse
mistyfirst wrote:

It's wonderful to see such a well written article on Type 1 diabetes. So many parents are not aware of the symptoms of this autoimmune disease, which can come on so suddenly. I was one of those parents before my own daughter's diagnosis with Type 1 diabetes at age 5. Thank you for spreading awareness of this disease! Misty www.BoxOfChocolatesBlog.com

1/13/2012 02:23:44 PM Report Abuse
rmmjbls wrote:

How many times have I read articles such as this and the facts are all wrong! I am so pleased to see that Parents Magazine got it all right! I have three boys with Type 1, diagnosed at 8 months old, 2 years old, and 5 years old. Fighting the misconceptions is almost as daunting as fighting daily blood sugar swings! You have endeavored to accomplish something greater than the most popular news outlets out there...you have reported the facts correctly. Thank you for that! Meri ourdiabeticlife.com

1/13/2012 12:58:18 PM Report Abuse
andigirl5271 wrote:

I'm so happy to see a article about Type 1 diabetes. So often type 1 & 2 are lumped together. As a parent of a daughter with type 1 for 10 years, it gets tiresome having to tell people, "no, I didn't feed her too much sugar"..."yes, she CAN have anything...within moderation". My daughter was recently told, "I'm still your friend even though you ate too much sugar and got diabetes". My daughter took a deep breath and corrected the girl. Thank You Parents Magazine!

1/13/2012 12:53:24 PM Report Abuse
candyheartsblog wrote:

Thank you, Parents Magazine, for highlighting this most important topic! Type 1 Diabetes does not discriminate,and often strikes out of nowhere - even if there is no history of any type of diabetes in the child's family. It is NOT caused by lifestyle choices, such as eating too much sugar or lack of exercise. No child is immune to the possibility of developing Type 1 Diabetes, regardless of medical or genetic history. Wendy Rose www.CandyHeartsBlog.com

1/13/2012 11:58:49 AM Report Abuse
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