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Recently, a research article was published in Diabetes Care, an authoritative journal in the field of diabetes .
Type 1 diabetes in diabetic children
The researchers used population samples from the National Registry of Sweden (n=2517277) and Denmark (n=1825920) to investigate the correlation between type 1 diabetes and eating irregularities, as well as family gatherings between identical siblings Sex.
Based on the clinical diagnosis , researchers classified eating disorders into any eating disorder (AED), anorexia nervosa (AN), atypical AN and other eating disorders (OED).
diagnosis
Type 1 diabetes patients in Sweden and Denmark are at greater risk of being diagnosed with an eating disorder (HR [95% CI] Sweden: AED 2.
This shows that patients with type 1 diabetes have a higher risk of eating disorders; however, there is conflicting evidence for the relationship between siblings with type 1 diabetes and being diagnosed with eating disorders.
People with type 1 diabetes have a higher risk of developing an eating disorder; however, there is conflicting evidence for the relationship between siblings with type 1 diabetes and being diagnosed with an eating disorder.
Original Source:
org/10.
2337/dc20-2989" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Association or and Familial Coaggregation of Type 1 Diabetes and Eating Disorders: A the Register-Based Cohort Study in Denmark and Sweden
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