Type 1 Diabetes: Living With The Disease: Surgery
Surgery
Surgery is not a routine way of treating type 1 diabetes. You are eligible for surgery only if you meet specific criteria.
- You may have a pancreas transplant
surgery if you have had or plan to have a kidney transplant
or, in rare cases, if you meet other requirements. - You may have islet cell transplant surgery if you meet the rules for being in a study. Islet cells transplanted into the liver make insulin.
Surgery Choices
What To Think About
Pancreas and islet cell transplants are very expensive. After having one of these surgeries, you must take immunosuppressive medicines for the rest of your life to prevent your body from rejecting the new tissue.
The success rate for pancreas transplants has improved with new surgical techniques and new immunosuppressive medicines. Islet cell transplants may replace pancreas transplants in the future but for now they are experimental.17
| Last updated: | October 03, 2008 |
|---|---|
| Author: | Caroline Rea, RN, BS, MS |
| Reviewed By: | Caroline S. Rhoads, MD - Internal Medicine, Matthew I. Kim, MD - Endocrinology & Metabolism |
| Editors: | Susan Van Houten, RN, BSN, MBA, Pat Truman, MATC |
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