Symptoms of Type 3 Gaucher disease begin during early childhood with symptoms like Type 1.
The common symptoms vary between type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Some symptoms of type 1 are weight loss, hunger, unusual thirst, frequent urination as well as fatique and irritability. Symptoms with type 2 are the same as type 1 but may also include cuts/bruises (healing slowly), blurred vision and numbness or tingling in your hands or feet. Please look here for more information: http://www.diabetes.org/diabetes-basics/symptoms/
A blood type is not a condition or illness. Therefore, a blood type does not and can not have "symptoms".
Symptoms of Type 2 Gaucher disease, which are similar to those in Type 1, progress rapidly, but also include nervous system damage.
Fatigue. Frequent urination. Irratability. Drastic weight gain/loss. Change in eating behavior. Nausea. Rapid heart beat. Headaches. No energy.
It depends on your point of view. Type 1 schizophrenia is characterized by positive symptoms, including delusions and hallucinations. Type 2 schizophrenia is characterized by negative symptoms, including flat affect and social withdrawal. Each can cause great difficulties in everyday life.
With treatment and control of symptoms, people with Type 1 Gaucher disease may lead fairly long and normal lives.
Symptoms of Type 1 diabetes can include fatigue, thirst, weight loss without trying, frequent urination, blurry eyesight, and being hungry often. There are some cases that can include tingling in the extremities.
Signs/symptoms in the classical form (type 1) develop in infancy and progress slowly, with death occurring in late adolescence or early adulthood. The connatal form (type 2) also develops in infancy, but progresses more rapidly
The major symptoms involved in EDS classical type are the skin and joints
Type 1 DiabetesFrequent urinationUnusual thirstExtreme hungerUnusual weight lossExtreme fatigue and IrritabilityType 2 Diabetes*Any of the type 1 symptomsFrequent infectionsBlurred visionCuts/bruises that are slow to healTingling/numbness in the hands/feetRecurring skin, gum, or bladder infections*Often people with type 2 diabetes have no symptoms
Common symptoms of Diabetic retinopathy includes blurred vision, fluctuating vision, vision loss, difficulty with color identification, dark or empty areas in your vision and spots floating in your vision.