These are also referred to
as juvenile onset and adult onset diabetes, or insulin dependent and non-insulin dependent diabetes.
Type 1 is called insulin - dependent diabetes (also known
as juvenile onset diabetes), and type 2 is called non-insulin-dependent diabetes (or adult onset diabetes).
Not exact matches
Although
juvenile glaucoma accounts for fewer than 1 % of all cases, early indications are that mutations in the TIGR gene are behind at least 3 % of adult -
onset cases
as well.
Type 1 diabetes (previously known
as insulin - dependent,
juvenile or childhood -
onset) is characterized by deficient insulin production.
As a long - term,
juvenile -
onset Type 1 for over 50 years» duration, I have to say that from my own experience, beans spike bg and increase insulin dosage requirements.
Though the plot will of course clear up
as players progress, the
onset leaves one feeling
as if they're reading a library book from which the first chapter has been ripped out by some
juvenile miscreant.
Juvenile -
onset demodicosis is further categorized
as localized or generalized according to the extent of the disease.
In dogs under 1 year of age, demodex is referred to
as Juvenile -
onset demodicosis, where in adults it is called generalized adult -
onset demodicosis.
It is prone to eye diseases such
as juvenile cataracts, late -
onset cataracts, entropin, distichiasis, glaucoma, corneal dystrophy, corneal ulcers, cherry eyes, dry eyes and also other health issues such
as deafness, patellar luxation, heart and skin tumors.
Generalized mange, either
juvenile or adult
onset, is a serious and potentially life threatening disease,
as unresponsive cases sometimes require euthanasia.
Generalized red mange is classified
as either
juvenile - or adult -
onset, depending on the breed and age of your dog when he develops the condition.
Third, the identification of risk factors for
juvenile -
onset MDD in no way ensures their causal status.47 Although the early childhood risk factors (except childhood sexual abuse) covered the period prior to the first diagnosis of MDD (and could thus be ruled out
as consequences of depression), future research is needed to determine whether changes in any of the childhood risk factors would decrease the likelihood of MDD, thus implying their causal status.
Distinctions based on age of
onset have proven important for understanding heterogeneity within attention - deficit / hyperactivity disorder51 and antisocial disorder, 52,53 in which childhood
onset has worse implications for course, recurrence, familial transmission, and treatment resistance.54 Research on schizophrenia is also benefiting from a focus on childhood neurodevelopmental processes55 and
juvenile -
onset symptoms.56 The present study and others1 illustrate that the distinction between
juvenile vs adult -
onset MDD is important for understanding heterogeneity within depression
as well.
A question for future research is whether risk factors exert their effects for only a limited period (suggesting that the same risk factors we measured in early childhood, such
as losing a parent, would predict adult -
onset MDD if they occurred in late adolescence) or whether risk factors are developmentally sensitive, and those that predict
juvenile -
onset MDD are qualitatively different from those that predict adult -
onset MDD.
SEVERAL FINDINGS suggest that
juvenile - and adult -
onset major depressive disorder (MDD) have distinct origins.1 First, although a significant proportion of depressed children become depressed adults, 2,3 most individuals who experience depression in adulthood were not depressed
as children.4 Second,
juvenile -
onset MDD is associated with increased risk for MDD among the first - degree relatives of depressed probands in clinical and community samples.4 - 8 Third, the children of depressed parents are at high risk for
juvenile -
onset MDD compared with the children of nondepressed parents, and this association is explained by early parental age at
onset of MDD.9
However, depressed children and adolescents may also experience unique psychosocial risks, such
as poor parenting or family discord, especially if these risks are genetically mediated.10, 11 Additional support for the hypothesis that
juvenile - and adult -
onset MDD are distinct subtypes would be demonstrated if early childhood psychosocial risks were differentially associated with
juvenile vs adult -
onset MDD.
Despite increasing evidence for an early vs late -
onset distinction, a small body of research suggests there is also heterogeneity within
juvenile -
onset groups
as a function of whether the child was prepubertal or postpubertal at
onset.