Ledzeptt
Well-Known Member
I highly recommend you watch this amazing TV programme on BBC iplayer, if you have a licence:
“Surgeons: at the edge of life Series 7, Ep 1 “A lot to lose”” as it focuses on hepatitis-biliary surgeon Rahman Ravindran and his team in Edinburgh with a young patient suffering from chronic pancreatitis. The (notably graphic) surgery involves removing the pancreas, spleen and duodenum to then transplant the islets cells back and avoid (T3c? although referred as brittle in the programme) diabetes.
It was amazing to see pancreas surgery in detail and the “life and death” decisions surgeons have to face in the moment.
I deliberately haven’t given the patient’s details/symptoms, but I think many of us in the T3c sub-forum will relate. I will admit to shedding a few tears (you’ll see what I mean).
“Surgeons: at the edge of life Series 7, Ep 1 “A lot to lose”” as it focuses on hepatitis-biliary surgeon Rahman Ravindran and his team in Edinburgh with a young patient suffering from chronic pancreatitis. The (notably graphic) surgery involves removing the pancreas, spleen and duodenum to then transplant the islets cells back and avoid (T3c? although referred as brittle in the programme) diabetes.
It was amazing to see pancreas surgery in detail and the “life and death” decisions surgeons have to face in the moment.
I deliberately haven’t given the patient’s details/symptoms, but I think many of us in the T3c sub-forum will relate. I will admit to shedding a few tears (you’ll see what I mean).