Type One Diabetes and Hope for a Cure

Diabetics Daily Regimen is Complicated and Could Use Improvement



Hoping For A Cure

Type one diabetes is a disease that affects without warning, as it knows no gender, class, race, or religious limits. Type one diabetes most often takes those afflicted by storm, changing their
 lives forever. Type one diabetes has no cure, only treatments to keep blood glucose levels regulated and to keep the person who has diabetes healthy and happy. In the last ten years diabetes research has made the treatment of diabetes much more tolerable, yet it would still be a win for scientific research if we could put all the pieces of the puzzle together to find a cure for this chronic disease that affects so many people on a day-to-day basis.

Type one diabetes means that a person is and always will be insulin dependent. When a person does not have diabetes their body makes insulin to counteract the sugars in the foods they eat, but those with type one do not produce insulin. Unfortunately, the only way for those with type one diabetes to take their insulin is through shots or what is called an insulin pump. Either way, a person has to insert a needle into their body to get a regulated amount of insulin because their body lacks this vital substance.

It seems like finding a cure for type one diabetes would be simple, because we know what the problem is. The medical community is well aware that type one diabetes is simply the lack of insulin production which causes the cells in the body to become so inundated with glucose that they cannot function properly, so it would seem to be an easy fix. Unfortunately, type one diabetes isn't easy to cure because it's not as simple as figuring out how to make the pancreas that is responsible for insulin production secrete insulin again. Type one diabetes is an autoimmune disease, meaning that for one reason or another, the body attacks and kills off the insulin producing cells. This means even if doctors were to transplant insulin-producing cells into the diabetic pancreas that they would only work for a limited amount of time, until the body killed off those implanted cells.

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im just playin

Posted on 12/19/2007 at 9:12:16 AM

this place is really gay i hope u all die

Posted on 12/19/2007 at 9:12:53 AM

Vanessa... My heart goes out to you. My 7 year old son was diagnosed last year with Type 1 diabetes. I have had people close to me tell me how "manageable" the illness is, while I watch their kids get second helpings of ice-cream and cake. They are oblivious to the difficult reality of the constant carb counting, food choices, preparing special meals, testing, injecting 24x7, every day...365 days a year. It is a stupid comment really, when seen from our eyes. I so completely understand the depth of the emotions you feel. I was helped tremendously by attending a Diabetes Camp last summer. While the kids did all the things kids do at any camp with the incredible volunteers who happen to be diabetics themselves, the parents were engaged in discussion with counselors and each other. We talked about the realities of finding a cure, the despair we sometimes feel. And we gained practical knowledge as well. The different stories that other parents had were so startlingly similar to our own,

Posted on 12/15/2007 at 11:12:39 PM

Do you really think that that is more important than finding a cure Jennie? If you do I think you are very stupid. We just found out that our son has type 1 diabetes 4 months ago, he just turned two. Our life has been turned upside down. His poor little fingers are all full of pin pricks from checking his sugar levels, his little arms and legs are all full of bruises from all the needles he has to have. I have to listen to him cry every time we go to the store because he is too small to understand why he can't have treats like all the other children. When we go to birthday parties I have to bring snacks with us so he can sit and eat with the other kids, and again cry because he can't have a cookie. How many cookies have you had in the last 4 months? So until you know what my sons happiness is worth to me or any child's happiness is worth to any parent, don't talk about companies who over charge millons of people for drugs that they need to survive. I think you should sit down and think

Posted on 11/16/2007 at 9:11:00 PM

Ron... i am no expert that is for certain however. We cure the masses.. or atleast that is the goal right. So i would think that considering type 2 diabetes accounts for about 90-95% of all diabetics it may be "smarter" to figure that one out first. just some food for thought.

Posted on 11/14/2007 at 11:11:00 AM

Drug companies would lose billions of dollars if a cure for type one diabetes was found!

Posted on 11/09/2007 at 8:11:00 PM

I think it's a very common disease and it mainly happens to children/teenages before he/she turns the age of eighteen. In order for the person she/he to live they must inject with insulin every single day. OH, Its such a tragic thing the desease diabetes both types.

Posted on 08/15/2007 at 1:08:00 AM

it rox so bad

Posted on 08/15/2007 at 1:08:00 AM

I'd like to write to someone with this type of illness. I'm nine and I think it will make them feel better. i know there not in the hospital. but still.

Posted on 04/02/2007 at 2:04:00 PM

The JDrF has now spent over ONE BILLION dollars to find a cure for Type I diabetes, needless to say with ZERO results. This is a crime. The ADA is primarily interested in Type 2 diabetes, and individual rights of persons with diabetes, which is commendable but will bring us no closer to a cure.

Posted on 03/18/2007 at 9:03:00 AM

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