by Jo | July 5th, 2005
Three Million People in the UK Have It, but Diabetes is Surrounded By Myths
A list of myths surrounding Diabetes.
Stram still Chiefs’ all-time winningest coach
Hank Stram, who took the Kansas City Chiefs to two Super Bowls and was known for his inventive game plans, died Monday, his son said. He was 82. Stram had been in declining health for several years, and Dale Stram attributed his father’s death to complications from diabetes.
(I-Newswire) - Islets are the cells in the pancreas which produce insulin. Researchers have been refining the transplant technique which allows people with Type 1 diabetes to begin producing their own insulin again.
Normally islets from two or three donor pancreases are used for the transplants but last week the Royal Free Hospital in London announced positive results after a woman with Type 1 diabetes received islets from just one donor pancreas. Within a day of the transplant her insulin requirements had dropped considerably and within three weeks she was on a dose of just four units of insulin a day.
“The progress being made in islet transplantation is exciting,” said Jo Brodie, Islet Project Coordinator at Diabetes UK.
“The technique is complex but the islet consortium in the UK is having regular successes and the process is being constantly refined. There is still a long way to go but we hope that eventually, islet transplantation may be offered as an effective treatment for Type 1 diabetes.”
So far, islet transplants have taken place at King’s College Hospital and the Royal Free Hospital in London and at the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford. Work is also going on in Bristol, Cambridge, Edinburgh, Leicester, Newcastle and Worcester.
ACTOS® (pioglitazone HCl) significantly improved components of diabetic dyslipidemia
A new study published in today’s issue of Diabetes Care demonstrated that ACTOS improved components of diabetic dyslipidemia to a significantly greater extent than Avandia. Specifically, the results indicated that treatment with ACTOS lowered triglycerides (a type of lipid, or fat, found in food and the body), increased HDL-C (”good” cholesterol), and improved LDL-C (”bad” cholesterol) particle concentration and particle size. These differences were independent of blood glucose control and occurred without the use of a traditional lipid-lowering statin medication.
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July 5th, 2005 at 10:40 am
Encouraging news!
July 5th, 2005 at 10:53 am
Very interesting stuff.