Diabetic woman becomes the first in the world to get a pancreas transplant because of her NEEDLE phobia

January 31, 2016  21:38

A British woman has become the first patient in the world to have pancreas transplant because of her needle phobia. 

Sue York, who has suffered from type 1 diabetes since she was a child, claims she would shake uncontrollably and vomit at the thought her twice-daily insulin injections. 

This is despite the fact she has had a belly-button piercing for 20 years - a procedure she claims 'felt completely different' as needles are 'far more intrusive'.

Type 1 diabetes causes a person's blood sugar, or glucose, level to become too high because the pancreas doesn't produce any insulin.

Insulin allows glucose to enter the tissues and be used as energy so people with type 1 diabetes must inject it. 

But Ms York says her extreme phobia of needles meant the process was always a terrifying ordeal.

Usually, transplants are only available to patients with a physical medical condition such as kidney failure. 

After several consultations with a board of doctors, she was finally placed on the transplant list for a pancreas on account of her phobia.

On February 13 last year a suitable donor became available and she underwent a full pancreas transplant at Manchester Royal Infirmary.

The three-hour operation was a success and Ms York, 55, of Mablethorpe, Lincolnshire, became the first person in the world to have such a transplant because of a phobia of needles. 

Yesterday she told how the operation had transformed her life.

And when asked about her naval piercing, she said it felt 'completely different'.

'I had a piercing done for my 35th birthday. It was a present from my husband,' she said.

'For me it is totally different (than a needle phobia).The piercing felt completely different when it was put in. Needles are far more intrusive.'

The grandmother-of-six told the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme the anticipation of the injection twice a day would leave her feeling physically sick. 

'I would measure the insulin up by distancing myself from it and switching myself off but when it came to actually putting the needle into my body that was a very different issue,' she said.

'Sometimes I would shake uncontrollably and I would have to put it down and walk away.

'Other times because I would start to feel extremely sick I would vomit.

'It got to a point when I was beginning to seriously struggle to actually maintain doing two injections a day.

'I did because you know your life depends on it, you have no option, you have to do it but it was becoming just horrendous.'

Since the operation, she says she now feels 'incredible' and full of energy and doctors say her life expectancy has now doubled.

She has even had to get a new pair of glasses because her eyesight has improved.

Diabetes also causes nerve damage and loss of sensation but Ms York said she had regained some feeling again since the operation.

She said: 'No longer am I struggling to walk up a flight of stairs, getting breathless walking into the wind. No longer is my skin yellow or grey.

'No longer do I look constantly exhausted. 

She first applied for a pancreas transplant in 2012, after the DVLA changed its rules insisting diabetic drivers checked blood glucose levels by way of a finger prick test before getting behind the wheel.

Terrified by the prospect of more injections, she thought it was easier to give up driving. 

She said: 'It was just too many needles, too many invasions into the flesh, I couldn't bear to do it so I gave up driving.

'If I got into an accident and was unable to take a finger prick test I may have been committing a crime. I didn't want that kind of pressure.

'I became virtually housebound because I was too weak to walk long distances. I was trapped and desperate. 

'I tried hypnotherapy to cure my phobia but it never worked.'

She asked her doctor for help and was referred to a diabetes expert at Manchester Royal Infirmary.

It took two-and-a-half years, and three transplant panel meetings, before she was finally accepted onto the transplant list. 

But after just 21 days, the life-changing call came to say a suitable donor had been found.

'I don't know who my donor is, but I thank them and their family from the bottom of my heart. 

'The doctors said it was an excellent donor and I was an excellent match.

'For me, my phobia had a physical effect on me and I was just as in need of a transplant as someone with kidney problems.'

Ms York now faces blood tests every three months and undertakes a weekly finger prick test to make sure the pancreas is still working.

Surgeon Dr Raman Dhanda, from Manchester Royal Infirmary, said guidelines were currently in place nationally and internationally to ensure those with the greatest need received transplants.

He said: 'It was a very hard decision to make, because [her] case was clearly very exceptional.' 

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