Abstract
A 22-year-old Chinese male died in hyperglycaemic coma following a 36-h illness. The only significant pathological findings were in the pancreas where there was a heavy diffuse infiltrate of lymphocytes admixed with numerous eosinophils, macrophages and polymorphs. There appeared to have been massive, recent, synchronous necrosis of insulin-secreting B cells with no destruction of any other pancreatic parenchymal cells. The biochemical findings of severe hyperglycaemia, insulinopoenia, but a normal glycosylated HbA1 were compatible with an acute onset to the patient's diabetes. These features contrast with the very much slower destruction of B cells associated with insulitis seen in "classical" Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes. © 1988 Springer-Verlag.
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Foulis, A. K., Francis, N. D., Farquharson, M. A., & Boylston, A. (1988). Massive synchronous B-cell necrosis causing Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes - a unique histopathological case report. Diabetologia, 31(1), 46–50. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00279132
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