Republished by Dan Calloway
August 31, 2009 at 10:20 EST; The Chronicler’s Web

By Gregg Keizer

January 06, 2009 — Computerworld

Apple Inc. CEO Steve Jobs may have symptoms that resemble Type 1 diabetes, a noted endocrinologist said today, and he could be treated with insulin.

Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs

Earlier today, Jobs blamed a “hormone imbalance” for the weight loss that has sparked speculation about his health since last June, when he appeared at Apple’s annual developers conference looking gaunt. Much of the talk about his appearance, and concern by investors about his condition, centered around the possibility that he again had cancer.

In August 2004, Jobs, who is 53, announced that he had had surgery to remove a cancerous neuroendocrine tumor in his pancreas.

According to Dr. Run Yu, director of the Carcinoid and Neuroendocrine Tumor Center at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, there are two likely explanations for Jobs’ weight loss.

“A lot of this is speculative,” Yu said to preface his reasoning, “since I don’t know Mr. Jobs’ condition specifically. But in terms of weight loss, and if the tumor was completely removed, it would be likely that he would have secondary Type 1-like diabetes. That’s very common with patients who have had a large chunk of their pancreas removed. I see that very commonly.”

When patients have surgery similar to Jobs’, surgeons may have to remove many of the “beta cells”—the type of cell in the pancreas that produces and releases insulin—along with a portion of the pancreas.

Technically, Yu explained, Jobs would not have Type 1 diabetes, but the symptoms and treatment are identical. If so, insulin would be the recommended treatment.

Another explanation that would fit Jobs’ history and the statements he made today would be a digestive enzyme deficiency, which could also have been caused by the removal of the cancerous tumor four years ago. “A likely clinical diagnosis would be poor absorption of nutrients,” said Yu. “The enzymes produced in the pancreas help us digest foods.”

If Jobs’ body is not generating those enzymes, he would not be able to efficiently draw nourishment from what he ate, Yu said.

The treatment for that, he said, would be an enzyme supplement, likely created from animal pancreases, that can be sprinkled on food. “You put it on your food and eat the food along with the enzyme,” said Yu. “It’s very straightforward.”

Jobs himself used the phrase “simple and straightforward” to describe his treatment, saying that his doctors had discovered he has a “a hormone imbalance that has been ‘robbing’ me of the proteins my body needs to be healthy.”

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2 Responses to “Steve Jobs, CEO of Apple, May Have Type 1 Diabetes”

  1. Diabetes may finally have a cure through extensive stem cell research. But for now, diabetes can only be managed by drugs or food supplements that controls blood sugar. I take Alpha Lipoic acid and Chromium because they are helpful in regulating blood sugar.

  2. the standard for diabetes is Metformin but i also try to use alternative medicine in controlling diabetes. Alpha Lipoic Acid and Charantia seems to work well too against diabetes.

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