Caryn, I have never heard or been told that the A1C is artificially low in the cf population. I'm looking around the internet and have gone through my CFRD book, but I'd be interested to know your source. I Learn new stuff every day even though I think I know it all. I just heard about cf-related liver disease for the first time today.
I still believe an A1C will provide Tonya a good snapshot of what is going on with Andrew. If it's elevated then she can be pretty certain he's either diabetic, or pre-diabetic and moving in that direction.
FYI - My endocrinologist - the aforementioned individual who believes that ALL cf patients should be on low-dose insulin therapy regardless of their diabetes status - also believes that insulin treatment can keep pre-diabetics from going over the edge. This is something that both you and Tonya might want to talk about with your respective endocrinologists.
Tonya - I've often thought that having a child with cf would be more difficult than actually having it myself. I have a healthy eleven year old daughter and her troubles bother me FAR more than my own. I have had long conversations about this issue with both of my parents and I have easily determined that my having cf was definitely harder on THEM than it was on me. So keep that in mind. Humans (and especially children) are very good at adjusting to their own situations and I'm sure Andrew is no exception. Parents on the other hand have a very difficult time watching their kids "suffer". I understand both perspectives. Yes, he will probably feel sorry for himself from time to time and get angry - especially when he's sick and during the tumultuous teenage years. But if he's like me he'll also learn to use it to his advantage. I recall faking a stomach ache when I was fourteen -in January 1981 - so I could stay home and watch Reagan's inauguration, as just one example. So try not to worry about him too much. Yeah, it does suck, but as I've told many people, cf is better than a lot of diseases where you really have NO control over what it does, such as MS, MD, ALS, and most cancers. We really do have a lot of control over the progression of cf in our bodies, and one of your most important jobs as a cf parent is to help Andrew grow up to fully understand this.
If you haven't already, you might consider having Andrew meet some healthy adults with cf. When I was his age the oldest person with cf I ever met was twenty-eight, and he wasn't in great shape. Now there are many many older people doing quite well. It might be beneficial for him to meet some. I talk to a lot of pediatric patients and their parents through my clinic in Albany.
David Sholes
44 DDF508; CFRD; AND ABPA too!