CHARLESTON, S.C. (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Chronic pancreatitis -- or
inflammation of the pancreas -- is a painful condition. Removing the organ is
sometimes the only option, but without the pancreas, the body can't produce
insulin and patients develop diabetes. Doctors have found a way to use another
organ to save patients from a lifetime of diabetes.
Every morning, Robin Rabun counts her blessings. For more than a decade, she
lived in constant pain.
"I'd been fighting with this for so many years, and I felt so, so bad and so, so
sick," Rabun told Ivanhoe. "I can't even describe it to anybody, how bad you
feel."
She was suffering from chronic pancreatitis.
"As time went on, it just progressively got worse to where I was taking pain
medication 24/7."
When medication and surgery didn't work, her only option was removing her
pancreas -- but that put her at risk for other complications.
"To remove the whole pancreas can be very debilitating, and patients can develop
a very brittle form of diabetes," Katy Morgan, M.D., associate professor of
surgery at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston, told Ivanhoe.
In an innovative procedure, surgeons removed Rabun's pancreas and brought it to
a lab where they took out insulin-producing islet cells. They then transplanted
those cells back into robin's liver. The goal -- her liver would start to
function like a mini pancreas.
"Then they can make insulin for the patient so the patient has an easier to
control form of diabetes, or perhaps even no diabetes at all," Dr. Morgan said.
Studies show after surgery, one-third of patients don't require any insulin.
"And the other two-thirds do have some islet function, and so they have a much
easier to control form of diabetes," Dr. Morgan explained.
Today, Rabun is diabetes-free. She's dedicated to staying healthy and enjoying
the next chapter of her life.
Alcohol use and gallstones cause most pancreatitis cases -- up to 90 percent,
but the disease can also be inherited.