Tajima N, LaPorte R E, Hibi I, Kitagawa T, Fujita H, Drash A L
Diabetes Care. 1985 Sep-Oct;8 Suppl 1:17-23. doi: 10.2337/diacare.8.1.s17.
Children in the United States are almost 20 times more likely to develop insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) than children in Japan. Little is known about the differences between the two countries that might account for this very large difference in risk. The current research compared the characteristics of IDDM in Japan with those of the United States (Allegheny County, Pennsylvania). Seasonality, relationship to socioeconomic status, and age at onset were similar. There was some suggestion of a sex difference. Of interest was that reported recent infections at onset were much higher in the United States. In addition, the risk to first-degree relatives in Japan appeared to be somewhat lower than in the United States, although this may have been the result of differences in ascertainment. These results are discussed in relation to potential factors that might account for the major incidence differences.
美国儿童患胰岛素依赖型糖尿病(IDDM)的可能性几乎是日本儿童的20倍。对于两国之间可能导致这种巨大风险差异的不同之处,人们知之甚少。当前的研究比较了日本IDDM的特征与美国(宾夕法尼亚州阿勒格尼县)IDDM的特征。季节性、与社会经济地位的关系以及发病年龄相似。有迹象表明存在性别差异。有趣的是,在美国,报告的发病时近期感染率要高得多。此外,日本一级亲属的患病风险似乎略低于美国,尽管这可能是由于确诊差异导致的。本文结合可能导致主要发病率差异的潜在因素对这些结果进行了讨论。