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    TEDDY Update Highlights Progress on Type 1 Diabetes and Celiac Disease Research

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.

    Study looks at possible factors that promote Type 1 Diabetes, celiac disease, and related autoimmune conditions in children.

    TEDDY Update Highlights Progress on Type 1 Diabetes and Celiac Disease Research - Image: CC BY 2.0--2C2KPhotography
    Caption: Image: CC BY 2.0--2C2KPhotography

    Celiac.com 06/22/2020 - Since 2004 data collected prospectively by The Environmental Determinants of Diabetes in the Young (TEDDY) study group has helped researchers to better understand T1D, and associated autoimmune conditions, like celiac disease. TEDDY is funded by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK). 

    Celiac disease and T1D share a number of genetic factors. Seeking to explain why some children with high-risk genes develop T1D or celiac disease, while most do not, the TEDDY team monitors study subjects for both T1D and celiac disease. 

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    TEDDY research has already shown that genetically predisposed children who eat gluten at, or above, certain levels in early childhood, had higher rates of celiac disease. "An interesting finding from TEDDY has been how early the autoimmune destruction of insulin-producing cells begins–often in the initial two years of life," said study TEDDY co-chair Marian Rewers, MD, PhD, a professor of pediatrics and medicine and executive director of the Barbara Davis Center for Diabetes at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.

    The TEDDY study follows infants with high T1D risk factors for 15 years to look for certain beta-cell autoantibodies and diabetes. TEDDY has also looked at biomarkers that indicate faster or slower progression to diabetes after autoimmune destruction begins. "While T1D and celiac disease share a lot of genetic characteristics, there are intriguing differences in the ways these diseases develop and progress," says Dr. Rewers, adding that "TEDDY research and discovery will help drive the "design of future trials to prevent both T1D and celiac disease."

    TEDDY is looking to uncover viruses and nutritional factors that work with genes to initiate destruction of the beta cells by the immune system, which is signaled by the appearance of islet autoantibodies. Ultimately, TEDDY investigators are looking to uncover a way to prevent both diabetes and celiac disease in children. 

    The latest information from TEDDY highlights potential "triggers" for the autoimmune process that generates type 1 diabetes (T1D), and how those triggers engage  in children with with genetic risk factors for T1D. 

    That information is highlighted in the "Update from the TEDDY Study" symposium today at the American Diabetes Association's (ADA's) 80th Virtual Scientific Sessions. 

    Among TEDDY's latest findings are two new papers, Longitudinal Metabolome-Wide Signals Prior to the Appearance of a First Islet Autoantibody in Children Participating in the TEDDY Study; and Distinct Growth Phases in Early Life Associated With the Risk of Type 1 Diabetes.

    Read the original press release at PRNewswire.com. Stay tuned for more on TEDDY and related stories.


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    trents

    Follow up here and correction on my post above. In fact, type one diabetes does share some of the same genes as Celiac Disease. That's what I get from shooting from the hip before doing the research.

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    dolson

    Trents, please get your child on Dexcom. My Microscopic Colitis has caused my food to sit in my gut and not process food. It decides when to process my food. Type 1 diabetes and MC is tricky and difficult, but you can heal. It takes longer if you're older. I will do anything - starve myself if necessary because Type 1 diabetes will/can take you out. Sometimes my blood sugar is over 450 and sometimes in the 20s. A log of how much insulin to take does not work with MC and diabetes. It's a guessing game with how much insulin to take. I go to bed with my husband and he monitors my blood sugar so I don't have a severe low. My blood sugar was 16 and almost died while driving. I ended up at a secure penitentiary in Pennsylvania and remembered my phone number. God's Saving Grace saved me along with my beloved grandfather. Prayer helps.  

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    trents
    1 hour ago, dolson said:

    Trents, please get your child on Dexcom. My Microscopic Colitis has caused my food to sit in my gut and not process food. It decides when to process my food. Type 1 diabetes and MC is tricky and difficult, but you can heal. It takes longer if you're older. I will do anything - starve myself if necessary because Type 1 diabetes will/can take you out. Sometimes my blood sugar is over 450 and sometimes in the 20s. A log of how much insulin to take does not work with MC and diabetes. It's a guessing game with how much insulin to take. I go to bed with my husband and he monitors my blood sugar so I don't have a severe low. My blood sugar was 16 and almost died while driving. I ended up at a secure penitentiary in Pennsylvania and remembered my phone number. God's Saving Grace saved me along with my beloved grandfather. Prayer helps.  

    dolson, did you mean to address this post to someone else? I don't have a diabetic child.

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    knitty kitty

    @dolson,

    I'm sorry to hear you're still having such problems.  

    Benfotiamine, a form of thiamine, has been shown to help with diabetes.  

    Open Original Shared Link

    And high dose thiamine (500 mg) helps with Gastroparesis.

     

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    Scott Adams was diagnosed with celiac disease in 1994, and, due to the nearly total lack of information available at that time, was forced to become an expert on the disease in order to recover. In 1995 he launched the site that later became Celiac.com to help as many people as possible with celiac disease get diagnosed so they can begin to live happy, healthy gluten-free lives.  He is co-author of the book Cereal Killers, and founder and publisher of the (formerly paper) newsletter Journal of Gluten Sensitivity. In 1998 he founded The Gluten-Free Mall which he sold in 2014. Celiac.com does not sell any products, and is 100% advertiser supported.


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