Can you live without your pancreas, and if so what ...

Can you live without your pancreas, and if so what are the complications that ensue after your pancreas is removed


Share Send to a friend Watch Report
 
 

Posted Answers

Order by
 
7344 thumbs up

Love is the battery of life....

Hi,


That's a good question.  I'll give you a short answer:  Years ago, a patient without a pancreas could not survive (mainly because of severe diabetes and not being able to digest food).  However today patients can function without a pancreas and even live a reasonable normal lives (True, they will have to  take daily injections of insulin and pills that contain digestive enzymes for the rest of their lives).  Please don't forget that they have another option: pancreas transplantation.
Best regards,

Posted 10 months ago ( permalink )
Rated as
Best Answer
0
5

Helpful?

line
line
line



 

Hi,

I'm living without my pancreas, spleen and gall bladder, all removed in one 7 hour procedure in January 2004.  All this became necessary due to a rare condition, mucinous duct ectasia (of the pancreas).

My quality of life has improved constantly since the procedure, assisted greatly when I changed to using an insulin pump.  The enzymes need to be taken any time I eat, otherwise its apparent at the next bowel movement.  I am able to eat almost anything as long as I count the carbs (so I know how much insulin to take).  The diabetes is definitely the worst side effect of the surgery, fortunately the research into diabetes and its treatments is well funded.  The strongest reccommendation, from all my health carers to avoid the complications from diabetes (which can be aweful), was to eat mostly healthy whole foods and have a regular excercise routine.  I'm pleased to report that they have been correct and as a result I have been able to live a reasonable, normal life.

Best Wishes 

 

 


Posted 8 months ago ( permalink )
Rated as
#2 out of 5
0
0

Helpful?

line
line
line



 

Of course you can and very well.  Insulin in some form, injections or pump, and digestive enzymes with food are necessary, but it sure beats dying.


Posted 4 months ago ( permalink )
Rated as
#3 out of 5
0
0

Helpful?

line
line
line



 

It sure does beat dying.  I was diagnosed with Pancreatic Cancer in Dec 07. My entire pancrease had to be removed. Luckily nothing had spread to other organs or lympnodes.  I am on my 2nd last week of chemo, which has been hell for me with the side affects.  But I am alive and at times I cant beleive it.  Good luck to all who suffer from this.  Hang in there and just do what you have to do.....


Posted 2 months ago ( permalink )
In reply to ncpwrbear's answer
Rated as
#4 out of 5
0
0

Helpful?

line
line
line



 

NO you can not


Posted 21 days ago ( permalink )
Rated as
#5 out of 5
0
0

Helpful?

line
line
line



Sign in to participate

Got an answer for Maryquitecontrary? Would you like to comment on the posted answers, or vote for the one which you think is the best?

Sign up for a free account, or sign in (if you're already a member).

Explore Related Questions

Other people asked questions on similar topics, check out the answers they received:


Metal smell

after doing a hard cardio workout about 5 to 10 minutes later I get a metal smell thats hard to describe, What causes this
Submitted by mxmom 3 months ago
  • viewed 358 times

Last answer posted 3 months ago by FeistyFlirtyFemale


How to diagnose an infectious disease?

I just got back from India and have diarrhea and fever. I think I caught something and wonder what it could be?
Submitted by artfog 11 months ago
  • viewed 566 times

Last answer posted 3 months ago by petaburningdog


If my blood pressure is 174 over 72 my pulse is 70 ...

if my blood pressure is 174 over 72 my pulse is 70. I am 70 years old my weight is 190 is this a good reading or not?
Submitted by gmabunch1955 4 months ago
  • viewed 243 times

Last answer posted 3 months ago by EMTMommy



» More...