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Old 04-10-2011, 01:23 PM
wardmw wardmw is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 11
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That's a VERY interesting question and I am afraid I don't have a definitive answer for you, I was diagnosed when you were T1 if you injected and T2 otherwise.

Having your pancreas removed made you a T1 but having the islet transplant made you a non-diabetic (of sorts) (T0 anyone?). If the islets are sluggish and you are on tablets then you're likely to be a T2. I think there are T2s that inject, I guess the question becomes " What defines a T1 and a T2?". Based on the definition of "A T1 produces no insulin at all" (ignore honeymoon periods for this) and "A T2 produces little insulin" then you're a T2, but that's only based on the above statements!

|/|artin
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