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zookeeper671
05-12-2005, 03:02 PM
LONDON (Reuters) - Two teams of scientists identified the hormone insulin on Wednesday as the trigger that causes the more severe form of diabetes.

Researchers have been mystified about what makes the body's immune system turn against itself to attack cells in the pancreas that produce insulin, the hormone that regulates blood sugar levels.

Now they believe insulin itself is the key.

People with Type 1 diabetes, which accounts for 10-25 percent of cases, do not produce any insulin which helps glucose, or sugar, from food get into cells.

Type 2 diabetes, the more common form of the disease, is caused by an inability to make enough, or to properly use insulin. About 90 percent of sufferers have type 2 diabetes, which is linked to being overweight or obese.

"We are excited to be part of a growing body of evidence that points to insulin as the trigger for type 1 diabetes," said David Hafler of Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts who headed one of the teams.

George Eisenbarth and scientists at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center in Denver came to the same conclusion after studying mice.

Both research reports are published in the science journal Nature.

"If (the results) are reproduced and if it is true, then we have a way of stopping type 1 diabetes by turning off the immune response to insulin," Hafler said in an interview.

BIG PIECE OF THE PUZZLE

Diabetes already affects 194 million people worldwide and the number could rise to 333 million by 2025.

Hafler and his team identified insulin as the culprit by isolating and cloning immune cells from people with type 1 diabetes and healthy controls and testing them in the laboratory.

They discovered that the cells from the diabetics reacted to insulin but cells from the healthy controls didn't.

Eisenbarth and his team took a different approach but came up with the same answer.

They genetically engineered mice so they lacked normal insulin but still had a form of the insulin hormone that is not recognized by immune system cells. None of the mice with the modified insulin developed type 1 diabetes.

Hafler believes that if insulin is the driving force behind the disease, the next step is to test the hormone to see if it can be manipulated to prevent the disease.

"If we and others can confirm this (the results), it will be the best in vitro evidence possible that insulin is the antigen," said Hafler.

An antigen is a compound which causes the body to form antibodies.

Sufferers of type 1 diabetes need daily injections of insulin. Patients with the milder type 2 can be treated with diet, exercise or drugs to stimulate the secretion of insulin.

Diabetes is the fourth main cause of death in most developed countries, according to the International Diabetes Federation. It also raises the risk of heart disease, stroke, blindness, kidney damage and nerve disorders that can lead to foot ulceration and amputations.

DeusXM
05-12-2005, 03:18 PM
Sufferers of type 1 diabetes need daily injections of insulin. Patients with the milder type 2 can be treated with diet, exercise or drugs to stimulate the secretion of insulin.

Now that's a big pile of ****. Diabetes is diabetes, regardless of which type it is. Either one could cost you a leg.

Diabetes is the fourth main cause of death in most developed countries, according to the International Diabetes Federation. It also raises the risk of heart disease, stroke, blindness, kidney damage and nerve disorders that can lead to foot ulceration and amputations.

:thumbsup: Cheery stuff! :thumbsup:

soremom
05-12-2005, 07:44 PM
I liked the phrase "the more severe form of diabetes". I know the two are different in alot of ways but I didn't realize one was more severe than others, other than the complications that arise. And that is more person to person. Just what we need, someone giving us a new label. Oh well....

Kim

HeatherP
05-12-2005, 10:34 PM
Interesting info Angie, thanx for sharing it!

Ryan
05-12-2005, 11:26 PM
So they're saying that I, as a type II who injects insulin (two different kinds, at that), have a good chance of turning type I BECAUSE of the insulin itself?

That's kind of frightening..

DeusXM
05-13-2005, 03:10 AM
Probably not. I think they're saying that the autoimmune response which destroyed the islet cells in people with T1 is triggered by insulin - presumably the insulin, for one reason or another, is regarded as a foreign body and the immune system destroys the source in the belief it's a virus or something like that.

However the reason why the immune system believes the insulin to be foreign is genetic - people with T1 develop their condition purely through genetic means. I would say that in T2, although indeed this condition is partially caused by genetics, you do not have the same genetic fault that us with T1 have. Therefore your immune system will not identify insulin as a foreign, which means you get to keep your islet cells.

Either way though, both of us have exactly the same problems at the end of the day, which is why it is a fallacy to claim that T2 is a less severe form of diabetes.

Ryan
05-13-2005, 10:30 AM
Well, my grandfather is diabetic as well. I wonder if I'm predisposed to being a T1 anyways.

DeusXM
05-14-2005, 06:16 AM
That depends on what type your grandfather has. If he has T1 then there is a small chance you are predisposed to T1. However, give your age it seems unlikely - most people with T1 develop the condition before they're 16. If he has T2 then we can safely say you are predisposed to T2.

HeatherP
05-14-2005, 09:36 AM
There's an exception to every rule however: I'm at the least a 3rd generation T1, and I was 24 when dx'd.

Guess you could say I'm a bit of an oddity :1eye: