In type 1 diabetes, the immune system attacks the beta cells that produce insulin in your pancreas. The attack causes permanent damage and leaves your pancreas unable to produce insulin.
Exposure to antibiotics during a key developmental window in infancy can stunt the growth of insulin- producing cells in the ...
Type 1 and type 2 diabetes require different approaches. Discover the 9 essential distinctions that affect daily management ...
Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune condition associated ... When you develop type 2 diabetes, your pancreas will try to compensate by producing more insulin. Because your body is unable to ...
Antibiotics in infancy may impair insulin cell growth, increasing diabetes risk, while certain microbes could help promote ...
Take the type 1 diabetes (T1D) space, as one example. Today, new and exciting advancements are working to reduce barriers, ...
MORE than a hundred people turned up to Ornamental Lakes on Sunday in support of One Walk, an annual campaign for Type 1 ...
A single piece of genetic material influences whether someone develops type 1 diabetes, Dutch researchers discovered. People ...
Adopting early testing best practices with widescale T1D screening programs across Europe could mitigate the ‘invisible burden’ of diabetes.
In a new study in the peer-reviewed journal Diabetes Technology & Therapeutics (DTT), investigators evaluated biomarkers for ...
Exposure to antibiotics during a key developmental window in infancy can stunt growth of insulin-producing cells in the pancreas and may boost risk of diabetes later in life, new research in mice ...