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Islet Transplan Patient Reunion (June 2015)

PATIENTS

PATIENT

STORIES

June 2015, Islet transplant patient re-union. 

Our intention is to present a few of our patient experiences of going through islet transplantation. Some patients have great outcomes, while islet grafts completely failed in other patients. Complications vary among patients. 

We continue optimizing the procedure to improve patient outcomes and minimize the complications to  benefit our patients.

These are the stories of individuals with long standing, "brittle" form of type 1 diabetes mellitus, who received islet allotransplantation as an alternative procedure to whole pancreas transplantation.

 

All of them suffered for years from very similar, debilitating symptoms, leading to the same beginning narrative:

    ....After many years of  taking insulin and religiously keeping my blood sugar under 

control, I gradually stopped feeling when it was low, too low. I used to get agitated, shaky, hungry and knew I needed to grab a snack... Not anymore! Now, it happens without any warning. I can't predict it. I  am completely unaware when my speech starts to slur or when  I am getting confused.  Sometimes finding myself in unknown places, sometimes I pass out and wake up surrounded by family members, strangers or paramedics who injected glucagon. The frustrating and scary part is that I can't control it, and can't anticipate when it will happen. It may happen at night, and I am terrified that  I may never wake up. My wife and children check on me several times a day and they panic when I am not picking up the phone. Not only my life, but the life of  my family is badly compromised. I have been listening to my endocrinologists, trying several different settings on my pump a day and more at night but still lows happen. 

The only thing I can do, is to run my glucose high when I know I will be driving or have stressful days at work. But it means- everyday! Now, my A1c is 8-9  but I can't live like that either. I don't want to lose my sight, have toe amputations, a heart attack, or lose my kidneys because of high blood sugar. I am trapped, depressed, Prozac does not help anymore. ... I live in constant fear and am miserable. Please help!

 

 

 

....and below, you will find the rest of each patient personal story .... after the islet transplants!  

Tony
Tony
and Radar 

 Radar, a Labrador, is specifically trained to smell Tony's dropping or low blood sugars and alarm him and his family members...

.....The problem was that Radar is trained to be extremely  sensitive to prevent missing deadly low blood sugars. Frequently, the dog falsely alarmed the entire family, very often  in the middle of the night. 

Now, 5 and half years after his islet transplant, Tony remains insulin free and Radar is still an important member of the family. 

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