Type 1 Diabetes: Children Living With the DiseaseWhat Increases Your RiskRisk factors for very high or low blood sugar levels in a child
with
type 1 diabetes include: - Age. Very young children and boys of all ages
are at the greatest risk for very low blood sugar.2
- Tight blood sugar control. Although keeping your
child's blood sugar level tightly within a
normal or near-normal range is important, this puts
him or her at risk for frequent low blood sugar levels.3
- Persistent high blood sugar levels. Children who
have persistent high blood sugar, indicated by higher hemoglobin A1c test
results, are at greater risk for
diabetic ketoacidosis than children with lower
levels.2
- Puberty.
Growth spurts and changing
hormone levels that occur during puberty make it
difficult to keep a child's blood sugar level within a target
range.
- Psychiatric conditions. Children with
depression,
anxiety disorder,
panic disorder, or
eating disorders are at increased risk for frequent
high and low blood sugar levels.2
Although children are protected from developing complications from
diabetes (eye, kidney, heart, blood vessel, and nerve disease) during
childhood, they are at risk for developing these diseases in adulthood. Risk
factors for these complications include: - Persistent high blood sugar over time. The
higher your child's blood sugar levels and the longer they remain high, the
greater his or her risk of developing complications in early
adulthood.
- Length of time having the disease. The longer your child
has diabetes, the more likely complications will develop, even if blood sugar
levels are controlled.
- Eye damage from diabetes, called
diabetic retinopathy, is the most frequent cause of
new cases of blindness in adults ages 20 to 74.4
- Kidney damage,
diabetic nephropathy, eventually occurs in 20% to 40%
of all people with diabetes.5 Children who develop
nephropathy usually show the first signs of the condition after
puberty.
- Nerve disease. Most people with diabetes develop some
diabetic neuropathy over the years, but only about 13%
to 15% have noticeable symptoms.6
- Having one complication. In adulthood, if
children develop one complication, they are at risk for developing
others.
- Smoking,
high blood pressure,
high cholesterol, and a family history of diabetic
complications.
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