Hi all,
While I am kind of curious as to exactly what type of albinism I have, I am quite certain it is OCA1, probably 1a, I have never been tested and most likely never will be. I base my assumptions on the fact that I was diagnosed at birth in 1959 by a family Dr., no specialist! And I mean at birth, not the next day! My hair has not darken at all, other than the slight yellowing I get at times from pollutants or the green tinge from chlorine, both of which can be solved with that lovely purple shampoo that is maketed for old ladies!! To my knowledge, I have also gained no skin pigmentation, and my eyes are bluish purple.
The point of my post, though, is more of a chuckle on my part, and in no way is meant to be offensive and demeaning to anyone. Here goes!
The common refrain one hears when they or their child is diagnosed with albinism is that no one in their family has it, or they can't trace it on either side, etc. Well, I happen to be an avid genealogist and family historian, even doing some 'free' work for a couple of others besides myself. Besides collecting names, dates, and locations, I have also managed to get copies of photographs of many ancestors and relatives, dating back to some folks who were born 200 years ago! I currently have 11,311 persons in my database! While I cannot claim there are no other persons with albinism in there besides myself and my younger brother, I have yet to find one!! There may be one somewhere but then again, the recessive gene may have entered the family gene pools recently on both of my parents' sides and gotten together to create me! And with the way genetics works, it could exit the family genepool in a matter of generations, also. While my three daughters are definitley carriers, my two grandsons (so far) have only a 50% chance of being carriers, as they do not have albinism. And it seems my brother is a confirmed bachelor!
I just find the 'tracing it back in my family' comments personally amusing because tracing families back is one of the things I do best in life!
Good luck with your genetic testing. As a person with a degree in biology, I am always interested in the scientific aspect of these things.
Joni