jobs-dark

Bloomberg.com: Worldwide — FYI.

Apple Inc. Chief Executive Officer Steve Jobs is considering a liver transplant as a result of complications after treatment for pancreatic cancer in 2004, according to people who are monitoring his illness.

Patients with Jobs’s condition can survive for 20 years or more from the time of their original cancer diagnosis, and the surgery often gives good results, said Steven Brower, professor and chairman of surgery at Mercer University School of Medicine in Savannah, Georgia. Brower hasn’t treated Jobs and doesn’t know details of his condition.

Jobs, who appeared increasingly thin and frail throughout 2008, hasn’t provided details about his condition. In a statement released Jan. 5, Jobs said he was suffering from a “hormone imbalance” and that the remedy for his weight loss was “relatively simple.” On Jan. 14, he announced that he was taking a five-month medical leave because his health issues were “more complex” than he originally thought.

In a telephone interview today, Jobs said he won’t comment further on his health.




  1. kim Helliwell says:

    Oh, c’mon! This story was making the rounds last week and is based on NOTHING! It’s already been completely discredited. Bloomberg has NO sources “close” to Steve or any of his doctors.

    This story by Bloomberg destroys whatever respect I had for them (which wasn’t much to begin with, come to think of it).

  2. McCullough says:

    I’m sure with his pull, he wont have to be on a list with the peasants.

  3. travelsTooMuch says:

    John, you’re as reprehensible as Bloomberg. What, no semi-naked dancing girl as the lead? You’re slipping.

  4. Tomas says:

    #1. and #3. Like it or not, this is news. Imagine the number of people it affects.

  5. BL22 says:

    Death pool, anyone?

  6. Lou says:

    It sucks to get old.

  7. chuck says:

    It’s no secret that Steve Jobs drains the blood from a volunteer Apple fanboy every year, in order to sustain his creative energy.

    Now all he needs is a liver, and maybe a few other vital organs. It’s a small sacrifice.

  8. Paddy-O says:

    # 5 BL22 said, “Death pool, anyone?”

    “Patients with Jobs’s condition can survive for 20 years or more from the time of their original cancer diagnosis, and the surgery often gives good results, said Steven Brower,”

    “Jan. 5, Jobs said he was suffering from a “hormone imbalance” and that the remedy for his weight loss was “relatively simple.”

    http://www.gihealth.com/html/education/pancreaticCancer.html

    “By the time pancreatic cancer is diagnosed, it is usually too late for a promising outcome. In fact, pancreatic cancer has the lowest 5 year survival of any cancer.” … “The pancreas has two main functions. One is to produce hormones such as insulin, which regulates the blood sugar”

  9. Stopher2475 says:

    I’m sure there’s an Apple fan boy out there ready to donate a liver.

  10. kim Helliwell says:

    #4.

    The point is, it’s NOT news. It’s a made up story with no basis in verifiable fact.

  11. Rick Cain says:

    Probably just some investor wanting to short Apple stock.

  12. pedro says:

    #1 I didn’t know macfans had any self respect.

    #9 Problem is, no one can be a match donor to God Steve. There’s no one like him. That’s why macfans love hiom so much.

    #10 Maybe not. But it’s the logical progression if we look at what we have as facts. As #11 said, it might be someone wanting to manipulate the market, but Jobs paved the way to this by leaving shareholders both current & potential in the dark. Not to mention that Jobs himself tried to manipulate the stocks with that “hormonal imbalance” BS.

  13. Zybch says:

    If he did need a transplant (who knows if he actually does though), wouldn’t part of the anti-rejection regime be a well balanced omnivorous diet as well as the anti-rejection drugs he’d be put on along with the 30 odd protein, chemical and mineral supplements he’s already on every day to stave off his self inflicted malnutrition caused by his veganism??

  14. jescott418 says:

    I think Jobs waits too long until he gets real treatment. He must be someone who thinks he can treat himself. But even a common person could tell that he had a more serious condition that needed more then a diet adjustment.

  15. Mr. Fusion says:

    I’m not wishing ill on anyone, but, I also don’t think money should be the deciding factor in any organ transplant.

    Maybe if a few more people would sign their driver license donor forms there would be less of a line up for organs.

  16. Rob says:

    I like Steve as much as the next fanboy but lest be realistic here. Sure, it’s all speculation at this point but the official line doesn’t add up. Hormone imbalance? Malabsorption? Those sound like the symptoms rather than the root cause. I wish Steve the best and want to see him well but I fear he is sicker than we are being lead to believe.

    John’s a reporter. Don’t shoot the messenger.

  17. Paddy-O says:

    # 16 Rob said, “Hormone imbalance? Malabsorption? Those sound like the symptoms rather than the root cause.”

    Those are common symptoms of ongoing (and fatal) pancreatic cancer…

  18. Proud Alien says:

    Steve Jobs DOES NOT have a pancreatic cancer. In fact, his condition is very different from the classic pancreatic cancer in all respects: the disease itself, treatment, prognosis, etc. How do I know? I happen to have exactly the same condition. So, to those of you, jealous assholes, who are gleefully wishing Jobs to suffer for the sake of your enjoyment: go screw yourself. I hope you and yours never have to experience what he’s going through.

  19. Proud Alien says:

    # 17: Yet again, it appears you, PO, have no freaking clue what you are talking about here. For a change, if you are really curious, use Google to educate yourself before exposing your silly self.

  20. Paddy-O says:

    # 19 Proud Alien said, “Yet again, it appears you, PO, have no freaking clue what you are talking about here.”

    Argue with the doctors that wrote it, not me.

    http://www.gihealth.com/html/education/pancreaticCancer.html

    Where did you receive your M.D.?



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