-
This technique could potentially be used to deliver vaccines against other infectious diseases such as those administered in childhood, and also vaccines to manage chronic inflammatory and autoimmune conditions such as type-1 diabetes or vaccines to control certain allergies.
FORBES: A 'Needleless' Vaccination Even Mothers Will Love!
-
In addition, vitamin D has numerous other roles in the body, and a growing body of research is finding that deficiencies may be associated with an increased risk of certain types of cancer (especially colon cancer), type 2 diabetes, heart disease and autoimmune diseases like multiple sclerosis.
CNN: How much vitamin D do I need?
-
In addition, emerging research shows a possible role for vitamin D in the prevention or treatment of type 1 diabetes, some cancers, and autoimmune diseases including multiple sclerosis.
CNN: How much vitamin D should someone over 55 take?
-
Type 1 diabetes results from a rheumatoid-like autoimmune reaction in which one's own body attacks and destroys the beta cells of the pancreas.
CNN: What's the difference between type 1 and type 2 diabetes?
-
Type I diabetes is thought to be an "autoimmune" disease in which the body's own immune system - which is meant to fight foreign threats like bacteria - turns on the cells in a gland called the pancreas.
BBC: 'Thriving' babies in diabetes risk
-
Patients are at higher risk for Type 1 diabetes, mellitus, collagen vascular diseases, autoimmune thyroid disease.
CNN: Does eating gluten cause eczema?
-
To properly diagnose Type 1, doctors need to test for antibodies that indicate the presence of the autoimmune disorder.
WSJ: Wrong Call: The Trouble Diagnosing Diabetes