Researchers In Sydney have offered assurance to patients with insulin-dependent or Type I diabetes.
![New Hope in Type 1 Diabetes Treatment New Hope in Type 1 Diabetes Treatment](https://images.medindia.net/health-images/1200_1000/diabetics-kit1.jpg)
Researchers believe their study will lead to a treatment for type 1 diabetes after they successfully reversed the debilitating disease in mice, rats and pigs.
"We are thrilled with the results we have seen so far and I see absolutely no reason why the same technique will not work on humans," the Daily Telegraph quoted her as saying.
"It would release diabetics from having to inject insulin and, probably more importantly, it would help the people who are developing really bad complications, such as blindness, gangrene, heart problems, kidney failure and general neurological problems," she added.
Type 1 diabetes occurs when the pancreas, a large gland behind the stomach, stops making insulin. The body needs insulin to turn glucose (sugar) into energy.
Sufferers must inject daily doses of insulin to stop the potentially life-threatening ketoacidosis.
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Patients would need to undergo one-off keyhole surgery to inject the gene in the portal vein of the liver.
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