PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Stop diabetes with insulin tablets

2012-09-19
(Press-News.org) Type 1 diabetes is the autoimmune form of diabetes, in which the patients' insulin-producing beta cells are destroyed by their own immune system. "We know that if a person has two autoantibodies and one of them is against insulin, there is a 50 per cent risk that they will develop type 1 diabetes within five years. It doesn't matter how old you are", says Åke Lernmark, Professor of Experimental Diabetes Research at Lund University in Sweden.

"There are indications that oral insulin may prevent or delay the clinical onset of type 1 diabetes among individuals with autoantibodies against insulin, who are thus in the risk zone", says Åke Lernmark, who will be initiating and coordinating the Swedish TrialNet study.

Åke Lernmark refers to a study presented earlier in the year by American and Canadian researchers. In the study, which ran from 1994 to 2003, participants with relatives who had type 1 diabetes and at least two autoantibodies, one of which against insulin, took either oral insulin or placebo capsules containing an inactive substance. At first, the results were a disappointment. Just as many people in the treatment group became ill as in the placebo group.

"However, the subsequent analyses showed something different. Among those who had high levels of insulin autoantibodies at the start of the study, the oral insulin had an effect and the development of type 1 diabetes was delayed. The delaying effect lasted for as long as the participants took the insulin", says Åke Lernmark, adding that those who are now being recruited for the Swedish TrialNet study with oral insulin also have high levels of autoantibodies against insulin.

No one knows how oral insulin might stop type 1 diabetes. However, Åke Lernmark believes a possible explanation could be that the immune system becomes accustomed to the low daily doses of insulin in the gastrointestinal tract. The insulin is not perceived as a foreign substance to be rejected by the immune system.

This line of reasoning is the same as for desensitisation for allergies, in which the dose of the substance that provokes the allergy is gradually increased. The oral insulin study will run for several years and is open to all those who meet the requirements and are aged between 3 and 45.

### Contact: Åke Lernmark, Professor of Experimental Diabetes Research at Lund University Diabetes Centre in Malmö. Tel: +46 40 39 19 01, mobile: +46 706 16 47 79

*TrialNet TrialNet is an international network of researchers who study the development, prevention and early treatment of type 1 diabetes. A total of 18 clinics in the USA, Canada, Europe and Australia are involved. In Sweden, the study is coordinated from the Lund University Diabetes Centre in Malmö. The study is funded by the National Institutes of Health in Maryland, USA.

Link to previous study on oral insulin in the journal Diabetes Care 'Long-Term Outcome of Individuals Treated With Oral Insulin' http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/34/7/1585.full?sid=f9c771a7-8193-4ef1-890a-0b770fed3338


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Fighting melanoma's attraction to the brain

Fighting melanomas attraction to the brain
2012-09-19
The process of metastasis, by which cancer cells travel from a tumor site and proliferate at other sites in the body, is a serious threat to cancer patients. According to the National Cancer Institute, most recurrences of cancer are metastases rather than "new" cancers. Virtually all types of cancer can spread to other parts of the body, including the brain. Once metastatic melanoma cells are entrenched in the brain, patients typically have only a few months to live. Now Prof. Isaac Witz and his team at Tel Aviv University's Department of Cell Research and Immunology ...

Carbon dioxide from water pollution, as well as air pollution, may adversely impact oceans

2012-09-19
Carbon dioxide (CO2) released into the oceans as a result of water pollution by nutrients — a major source of this greenhouse gas that gets little public attention — is enhancing the unwanted changes in ocean acidity due to atmospheric increases in CO2. The changes may already be impacting commercial fish and shellfish populations, according to new data and model predictions published today in ACS's journal, Environmental Science & Technology. William G. Sunda and Wei-Jun Cai point out that atmospheric levels of CO2, the main greenhouse gas, have increased by about 40 ...

A TECNALIA study reveals the loss of nanomaterials in surface treatments caused by water

A TECNALIA study reveals the loss of nanomaterials in surface treatments caused by water
2012-09-19
This press release is available in Spanish.Researchers at TECNALIA recently published a study in the prestigious science magazine, Applied Catalysis B: Environmental, which reveals the emission of nanomaterials caused by water runoff on surfaces containing nanomaterials. These surface treatments are employed in numerous consumption and construction products, so evidences of the presence of engineered nanomaterials are beginning to appear in the environment. Concerns about their toxicity for human or the environment rose in the last years, so further studies are required. The ...

Revolutionary ultrathin, flat lens: Smartphones as thin as a credit card?

2012-09-19
Scientists are reporting development of a revolutionary new lens — flat, distortion-free, so small that more than 1,500 would fit across the width of a human hair — capable in the future of replacing lenses in applications ranging from cell phones to cameras to fiber-optic communication systems. The advance, which could lead to smart phones as thin as a credit card, appears in ACS' journal Nano Letters. Federico Capasso and colleagues explain that the lenses used to focus light in eyeglasses, microscopes and other products use the same basic technology dating to the late ...

Toward a better material for hip replacement and other joint implants

2012-09-19
In an advance toward a new generation of improved hip and other joint replacements, scientists are describing development of a potential implant material that flexes more like natural bone, fosters the growth of bone that keeps implants firmly in place and is less likely to fail and require repeat surgery. Their study on these so-called tantalum nanotube materials appears in ACS Applied Material & Interfaces. Hongyi Li, Jinshu Wang and Zhenting Zhang explain that the metal tantalum has advantages over titanium, stainless steel and other metals used in the current generation ...

Selective grazing and aversion to olive and grape leaves achieved in goats and sheep

Selective grazing and aversion to olive and grape leaves achieved in goats and sheep
2012-09-19
Researchers from the Research Group on Ruminants led by Elena Albanell, lecturer in Animal and Food Science at Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, have successfully achieved to prevent sheep and goats from chewing on the young leaves of olive trees and grapevines when grazing. By using the natural mechanism of conditioned taste aversion, researchers redirected the food preferences of ruminants, making them more willing to eliminate undesirable plants from these types of pastures, and thereby reducing the use of pesticides and farming equipment. The cultivation of woody ...

Children with autism experience interrelated health issues, says MU expert

Children with autism experience interrelated health issues, says MU expert
2012-09-19
COLUMBIA, Mo. – One in 88 children has been diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A new study by a University of Missouri researcher found that many children with ASD also experience anxiety, chronic gastrointestinal (GI) problems and atypical sensory responses, which are heightened reactions to light, sound or particular textures. These problems appear to be highly related and can have significant effects on children's daily lives, including their functioning at home and in school. Micah ...

Weight gain worry for stressed black girls

2012-09-19
Could the impact of chronic stress explain why American black girls are more likely to be overweight than white girls? According to Dr. Tomiyama of the University of California, Los Angeles in the U.S., and her colleagues, higher levels of stress over 10 years predict greater increases in body weight over time in both black and white girls. However, the experience of chronic stress appears to have a greater negative effect on black girls' weight, which may explain racial disparities in obesity levels. The work is published online in Springer's journal, Annals of Behavioral ...

Your memory is like the telephone game

2012-09-19
CHICAGO --- Remember the telephone game where people take turns whispering a message into the ear of the next person in line? By the time the last person speaks it out loud, the message has radically changed. It's been altered with each retelling. Turns out your memory is a lot like the telephone game, according to a new Northwestern Medicine study. Every time you remember an event from the past, your brain networks change in ways that can alter the later recall of the event. Thus, the next time you remember it, you might recall not the original event but what you ...

Simple routine could help athletes avoid choking under pressure

2012-09-19
WASHINGTON — Some athletes may improve their performance under pressure simply by squeezing a ball or clenching their left hand before competition to activate certain parts of the brain, according to new research published by the American Psychological Association. In three experiments with experienced soccer players, judo experts and badminton players, researchers in Germany tested the athletes' skills during practice and then in stressful competitions before a large crowd or video camera. Right-handed athletes who squeezed a ball in their left hand before competing ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Exploring the systematic anticancer mechanism in selected medicinal plants

University of Cincinnati researchers pen editorial analyzing present, future of emergency consent in stroke trials

Scarlet Macaw parents ‘play favorites,’ purposefully neglect younger chicks

One gene provides diagnoses for 30 patients whose condition was unexplained for years

Current practice and emerging endoscopic technology in the diagnosis of colorectal cancer

Decoding 17-beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 13: A multifaceted perspective on its role in hepatic steatosis and associated disorders

Key pathway leading to neurodegeneration in early stages of ALS identified

Ferroptosis in regulating treatment tolerance of digestive system tumors

A promising future in pancreatic incidentaloma detection

Stabilizing lithium-ion batteries: The vanadium touch

Innovative approaches to the surgical challenges in the management of gastroschisis

Mouse models for the study of liver fibrosis regression in vivo and ex vivo

At Fortune Global Forum 2024, Alex Zhavoronkov PhD, Founder and CEO of Insilico Medicine, discusses AI business potential

Exploring circulating tumor cells: Detection methods and biomarkers for clinical evaluation in hepatocellular carcinoma

New material to make next generation of electronics faster and more efficient

Research update: Chalk-coated textiles cool in urban environments

New take on immunotherapy reinvigorates T cells by blocking uptake of energy-sapping cancer byproducts

How much climate change is in the weather?

Flagship AI-ready dataset released in type 2 diabetes study

Shaking it up: An innovative method for culturing microbes in static liquid medium

Greener and cleaner: Yeast-green algae mix improves water treatment

Acquired immune thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) associated with inactivated COVID-19 vaccine CoronaVac

CIDEC as a novel player in abdominal aortic aneurysm formation

Artificial intelligence: a double-edged sword for the environment?

Current test accommodations for students with blindness do not fully address their needs

Wide-incident-angle wideband radio-wave absorbers boost 5G and beyond 5G applications

A graph transformer with boundary-aware attention for semantic segmentation

C-Path announces key leadership appointments in neurodegenerative disease research

First-of-its-kind analysis of U.S. national data reveals significant disparities in individual well-being as measured by lifespan, education, and income

Exercise programs help cut new mums’ ‘baby blues’ severity and major depression risk

[Press-News.org] Stop diabetes with insulin tablets