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Histopathology Pancreas --Type 2 Diabetes mellitus

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Uploaded by on May 26, 2007

Histopathology Pancreas --Type 2 Diabetes mellitus

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Uploader Comments (WashingtonDeceit)

  • in 99% of diabetes, islets show no changes

    wdc

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  • What kind of staining is this?

  • there is, I used to have diabetes, I had to eat a lot of green stuff, drinking spinach juice with fresh gingeroot juice by the gallons a week. Chromium...other minerals. Oxygen...I was clogged. Acid from coke. Aloe Vera Juice, celery and cucumber juice helps a lot. If you have diabetes and were not born with it or a weak pancreas (genetic), the chances you have a of other issues, diet and chemical related that caused this approach 100%. Diet manages it even if it's just a weak pancreas.

  • We (Science) is working as fast as we can... sorry for the delay

  • Im perplexed about diabetes. From what i know, type I diabetes occurs when the pancreas does not produce insulin so that can be solved (not cured) by injecting insulin...Right? But w/ type II diabetes the pancreas readily produces insulin but its the transport proteins that are defected, so when the insulin binds to receptors on cells the glucose cant enter. How do people w/type II diabetes live? Maintain living?

  • im getting tired, i wish there is a cure for this diabetes

  • how?/

  • GlyPerfect worked for me! I took GlyPerfect exactly as directed to help with a difficult 20 year bout with Type II diabetes. My blood sugar normalized. My HbA1c dropped to 6.2 from 8.2. My background includes developing the Maverick anti-tank missile. I am now consistently free of Diabetes symptoms.

  • in type II (non-insulin dependent) people begin to develop insulin resistance, i.e. body cells don't respond to insulin and take up glucose from the blood, so initially theres no apparent abornmality in the islets. however as the disease progresses, the B cells increase their insulin secretion because the blood glucose remains high, and eventually they sort of wear themselves out.

  • well in type I (insulin dependent), the insulin secreting cells in the islets are destroyed due to an auto-immune response.

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