Chapter 03 · Understanding Diabetes

Disease Origin

What sets diabetes off, and why it’s almost never one single thing.

Diabetes rarely has just one cause. It usually shows up when several risk factors line up, some you’re born with, some that build up over time. Spoiler: none of this is your fault.

Risk factors by type

What science has linked to each type of diabetes.

Type 1

🩸 Genetics + a trigger

Genetics play a major role, but environment matters too. Type 1 often shows up after a trigger event: like a virus or a gut infection. There’s nothing anyone can do to prevent type 1 diabetes.

Genetic factors

  • Close relative with type 1 (15× higher risk than general population)
  • Identical twin with type 1 (>50% increased risk)
  • Over 50 genes associated with type 1

Environmental factors

  • Early-life infections (including enteroviral)
  • Cereal exposure before 3 months old
  • Gut bacteria imbalance (dysbiosis)
  • Mother giving birth at an older age (>35)
  • Cesarean delivery
  • Antibiotics at a very young age
  • Stress from traumatic events (divorce, loss in the family)
Type 2

🔵 Genes + lifestyle factors

Genetics matter for type 2 too, and they seem to weigh more in young people than in adults. Environment, diet, and activity are also important.

Genetic factors

  • Family member with type 2 diabetes
  • Born to a mother with gestational diabetes

Lifestyle & medical factors

  • Obesity, the biggest risk factor in adolescents, especially severe obesity
  • Diet low in nutrients
  • Little or no physical activity
  • Dyslipidemia (low HDL, high triglycerides)
  • Prediabetes diagnosis
  • Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
  • Some antipsychotic medications
MODY

🧬 A single-gene story

Monogenic diabetes is the rarest type, caused by a change in a single gene. It’s usually inherited from a parent, but sometimes it’s a new genetic change that pops up for the first time in a family.

Worth knowing

🛡️ Risk factor ≠ guarantee

Risk factors only shift the odds, they don’t decide the outcome. People with every risk factor in the book sometimes never develop diabetes, and people with none sometimes do.

💛 Diabetes is never your fault

Type 1 cannot be prevented, full stop. And while certain habits can lower the risk of type 2, no one chooses this, and a diagnosis says nothing about who you are or how you’ve lived your life.

TeenHealthInsight is a health education website, not a substitute for medical advice. Any questions or worries about your medication, devices, or daily care should be brought to your doctor. Learn here, decide there, always loop in your diabetes team before changing anything you do.

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