Surgery
Some complications from
type 1 diabetes may need surgical treatment. For
example, surgery to remove the
vitreous gel (vitrectomy) may improve eye disease,
diabetic retinopathy.
For more information, see the topics:
For more information on heart and blood vessel disease, see the
topics:
If you have kidney damage from diabetes and are considering a
kidney transplant, you may be eligible for surgery to replace your pancreas
(pancreas transplant) at the same time. In either case, you need to meet
specific criteria to be considered for the surgery.
The only other surgery for type 1 diabetes is the insertion of
working pancreas cells (islet cell transplant) into your body. Islet cell
transplant surgery is experimental at this time, and you also need to meet
specific criteria.
Surgery Choices
- Pancreas transplant
surgery
- Pancreatic islet cell
transplantation
What To Think About
Pancreas and islet cell transplants are very expensive. After
having one of these surgeries, you must take immunosuppressive medicines to
keep your body from rejecting the new tissue.
The success rate for pancreas transplants is improving because of
new surgical techniques and new medicines. However, islet cell transplants may
replace pancreas transplants in the future.13 People
with complications from diabetes aren't always eligible for islet cell
transplants.