Track: Pancreatitis and Role of insulin

Damage to insulin-producing cells in your pancreas from chronic pancreatitis can cause diabetes, a disease that affects the way your body uses blood glucose. Pancreatogenic diabetes may be a sort of secondary diabetes, classified by the American Diabetes Association (ADA) and therefore the World Health Organization as type 3c DM (T3cDM).1,2 It refers to diabetes thanks to diseases of the exocrine pancreas: pancreatitis (acute, relapsing, or chronic pancreatitis of any etiology), pancreatectomy/trauma, neoplasia, CF, hemochromatosis, and fibrocalculous pancreatopathy
• Pancreatic diabetes
• chronic pancreatitis
Scientific Highlights
- Diabetes Mellitus and Research
- Endocrine Gland and Disorders
- Types of Diabetes
- Diabetes Symptoms and Complications
- Endocrine and Hormonal imbalance
- Diabetic Clinical Care and Prevention
- Food Science, Nutrition and Dietetics
- Obesity and Metabolic Syndrome
- Reproductive Endocrinology & Infertility
- Pediatric Endocrinology
- Nursing care and Management on Diabetes
- Pituitary and Neuroendocrinology
- Diabetic Retinopathy
- Treatment and Therapies for Diabetes
- Pancreatitis and Role of insulin
- Cardiovascular risk on diabetes
- Clinical Endocrinology
- Advances and Latest trends on diabetic research
- Diabetes and Liver Disease
- Genetics of Diabetes
- Thyroid
- Diabetic Nephropathy
- Business and Medical devices research on Diabetes
- Endocrine Surgery
- COVID19 and Diabetes
- Diabetic foot
- Stem Cell treatment in Diabetes
- Steroid Hormones and Receptors