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About Diabetes
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Update for Islet Cell
Transplants for Diabetes The report, on the Internet at www.citregistry.org, shows that 61% of patients who got the transplants no longer had to inject insulin six months later. This fell to 58% after a year. "We now have much-needed information on the short-term results of islet transplantation," said Dr. Thomas Eggerman of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, one of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, which funded the project. "Our goal is to collect data on both short- and long-term outcomes for all
patients who receive islet transplants so we can better define the overall risks
and benefits of this exciting but still experimental procedure," Eggerman added
in a statement. Source: Diabetes In Control.com. September 2004 News Article Index
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