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Biotech Science

Near-Complete Cure For Diabetes In Two Years? 271

resistant writes "Researchers at a Toronto hospital have stumbled upon a dramatic treatment for mouse diabetes, with large implications for the treatment of diabetes in humans. From the article: 'The islet inflammation cleared up and the diabetes was gone. Some have remained in that state for as long as four months, with just one injection... They also discovered that their treatments curbed the insulin resistance that is the hallmark of Type 2 diabetes, and that insulin resistance is a major factor in Type 1 diabetes, suggesting the two illnesses are quite similar.'"
Update: 12/17 03:46 GMT by KD : resistant adds that the Cell Journal article is posted as a PDF as well as in plain text.
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Near-Complete Cure For Diabetes In Two Years?

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  • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Saturday December 16, 2006 @06:22PM (#17272216)
    Sweet!
  • IAT1D (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    I am a Type 1 Diabetic, and what's particularly interesting about this is that this cure is found in a totally new area of study. Most of the treatments, such as Dr. Faustman's rather successful treatment up at Harvard, is that this treats the nervous system rather than the immune system. If this turns out to be true, it's a HUGE discovery for this reason alone.
    • My family has a history of diabetes, both on my father and mothers sides, so I hope that this really does work out since there is a strong chance that I will get it in my 40's
  • Hm (Score:5, Insightful)

    by CableModemSniper ( 556285 ) <.moc.liamg. .ta. .odlapacnagol.> on Saturday December 16, 2006 @06:26PM (#17272260) Homepage Journal
    TFA Title: Diabetes breakthrough
    Slashdot Title: Near-Complete Cure For Diabetes in Two Years?
  • by Timesprout ( 579035 ) on Saturday December 16, 2006 @06:27PM (#17272274)
    You have to respond 'Mouse' to the question:

    "Are you a man or mouse?"

    for the injection to be successful, otherwise you just develop a serious cheese addiction.
  • by the_humeister ( 922869 ) on Saturday December 16, 2006 @06:28PM (#17272286)
    I'd wait until human trials before getting too excited. The article is short on details, but this tidbit is interesting:
    They also discovered that their treatments curbed the insulin resistance that is the hallmark of Type 2 diabetes, and that insulin resistance is a major factor in Type 1 diabetes, suggesting the two illnesses are quite similar.
    Insulin resistance in type 1 diabetes? It'd be nice if they linked to the published article, unless they haven't published it yet.
    • I'd wait until human trials before getting too excited.

      FTFA: The researchers caution they have yet to confirm their findings in people, but say they expect results from human studies within a year or so.

      If the Canadian version of the FDA lets them fast track the approval process, this really could be the kind of medicine that is "five years" away instead of "five, but we really mean 10 years".

      Anyways, this treatment is only a 'temporary' (up to 4 months for some mice) cure. That's better than nothing though

    • by MrPotatoeHead ( 136285 ) on Saturday December 16, 2006 @06:53PM (#17272486)
      ok, ok, i'll do the work for you...

      http://www.cell.com/content/article/abstract?uid=P IIS0092867406014656 [cell.com]

      the link to the PDF for the entire article is to the right of the page
    • by smart2000 ( 28662 ) <karl@karlkraft.com> on Saturday December 16, 2006 @07:14PM (#17272660) Homepage
      Insulin resistance in type 1 diabetes? It'd be nice if they linked to the published article, unless they haven't published it yet.

      Yes, because using Google is so damn hard. Enter "Cell Journal" into Google. First link. The Article [cell.com] is available.

  • by DoofusOfDeath ( 636671 ) on Saturday December 16, 2006 @06:35PM (#17272350)
    Researchers at a Toronto hospital have stumbled upon a dramatic treatment for mouse diabetes
    This was a tremendous advancement. Mice diabetes it the country's great silent killer, affecting some 200-300 billion obese mice each year who can't squeak in their own defense. Until then, please, leave out celery sticks instead of cheese.
  • by flyingfsck ( 986395 ) on Saturday December 16, 2006 @06:35PM (#17272352)
    I guess the planet is really ruled by mice and that they are forcing scientists the world over to work on curing mouse diseases, as expounded in HHGG.
  • Inflamation (Score:5, Interesting)

    by fozzy1015 ( 264592 ) on Saturday December 16, 2006 @06:37PM (#17272360)
    Very interesting. Just a couple weeks ago NPR had an interview with three doctors about how the body's inflammation response is turning out to play a much larger role in diseases then previously thought. link [npr.org]
  • by PIPBoy3000 ( 619296 ) on Saturday December 16, 2006 @06:45PM (#17272430)
    I was reading a recent article about how someone theorized that humans currently have an overactive immune system. Long ago, a particularly nasty disease swept through the human population and only those with the most aggressive immune system survived. Of course, the legacy of this was that we have auto-immune diseases, asthma, and diabetes. Inflammation is great when fighting off invaders, but for ordinary living it's not so great.
    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      I don't know how long 'Long ago' is, but the time from the 14th-20th century, at least for Europe, Asia, and India, seemed to be a time for very nasty diseases to sweep through the human population and kill a significant percentage of the local human population. It stands to reason that the people who were left would have some immunity to the disease. For instance, after the one third of the population is killed with black plague, it would seem reasonable to assume that the survivors are those that are no
    • I'd be interested in knowing a few things about this article:
      What type of disease were they postulating? Bacterium? Virus?
      Does long ago mean 5,000 years, as in Egypt or Babylon, 50,000, as in Neandertal interaction period, or 500,000, as in pre Homo-Sapiens?
  • by Majestik ( 101669 ) on Saturday December 16, 2006 @06:55PM (#17272504)
    Given the relationship between insulin levels and weight lost/gain, I wonder if this wil get commercialized as a weight loss solution faster than a diabetes cure.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by DebateG ( 1001165 )
      Weight gain and loss isn't really mediated by insulin. Although insulin acts as a growth factor during prenatal development, it is generally thought that growth later in life is mediated by levels of growth hormone. This is why babies born to mothers who were uncontrolled diabetics during pregnancy tend to be large for gestational age. However, after birth, insulin doesn't seem to play a large role in growth.

      What you're thinking of is type 2 diabetes, which is probably *caused* by excess weight leading to i

  • Interesting treatment of diabetes but it is still years away for human use. Until then we have to live with complete 100% cure to diabetes -- pancreas transplant. Does anyone plan on donating their healthy pancreas when they die?
  • by DrRobert ( 179090 ) * <rgbuice@macDEGAS.com minus painter> on Saturday December 16, 2006 @07:06PM (#17272586) Homepage
    of it. This is not some fancy targeted new drug. They simply injected capsiacin to block the pain nerves leading into the pancrease. Capsaicin blocks the k receptor which is why the topical capsaicin pain creams work so well. They noticed a similarity in the nerves leading into the pancrease and other pain nerve clusters so they made a simple inject. I would say it is a long way from a treatment, but it changed the paradigm of how to target diabetes drugs in a simple logical way. That is why this is interesting.
    • by TheLink ( 130905 )
      The other interesting is the nerves are involved. So how are they involved in the disease? Locally or the signals have to travel elsewhere?

      After all many people say pain is in the mind. So how much of it really is in the mind now?

  • by Anonymous Coward
    I am sorry for the pesimistic title. But as a Diabetic for the last 21 years, I have seen it all. If you follow this stuff, there seems to be one landmark approach after the other.

    And what happens?

    Very little. The approach rarely pans out or is sustainable, like the islet transplant techniques of a few years ago.

    Diabetics, go for a run. Eat sensibly, and care for your body. Anything long term, is years, perhaps decades away.

    --Alan
    • by smart2000 ( 28662 ) <karl@karlkraft.com> on Saturday December 16, 2006 @07:32PM (#17272782) Homepage
      ...as a Diabetic for the last 21 years, I have seen it all. If you follow this stuff, there seems to be one landmark approach after the other. And what happens? Very little. ....... Anything long term, is years, perhaps decades away.

      My son is a Type I diabetic and last month he had to do a year based timeline in math to learn about positive/negative integers. He did his on the discoveries related to diabetes and in particular insulin.

      Lots of progress has been made over the years, and in particular the last 3 decades. The type of insulin he uses is just slightly older than he is.

      The media is great at making everything seem like it is the next big discovery(witness the title of this article), but this is a pretty significant change in the understanding of the causes and possible cures of diabetes.

      The injected substance is a natural substance already approved for injection for other medical purposes, and for this particular purpose (affecting nerve cells), although prior to this research no one had associated nerve cells with the onset of diabetes.

      This research is as signifcant as it gets. Up there with the discovery of anti-biotics, and it represents a wave of change in how several diseases will be treated in the coming decade.

    • by LauraW ( 662560 ) on Saturday December 16, 2006 @07:44PM (#17272858)

      I am (or was) a type 2 diabetic myself, so I know about getting my hopes up. A lot of strange things are happening in diabetes research lately, though, and it's starting to look like nobody really understood how it worked. Maybe they still don't, but they're at least starting to get a clue.

      As for myself, I finally gave up on dieting last summer and opted for weight loss surgery. For some reason that nobody really understands yet, some forms of weight loss surgery cure type 2 diabetes about 75% of the time. Those were good enough odds for me, and I got lucky: it worked. I've been off of all the diabetes medications since the day I got out of the hospital. My blood sugar, while not quite down in the normal range yet, is lower than it was before then surgery when I was taking the medications. And losing 75 pounds probably didn't hurt either. :-) This isn't for everyone, but at least there are starting to be options.

  • I predict these complaints:

    - Animal-rights wackos will complain about the animal testing involved.
    - Fat-haters will complain this lets fat people get away with being fat without worrying about dieing from diabetes.
    - And most of all, what about the hated drug companies who make a profit from this? How dare they expect to make a little money when all their drug does is cure diabetes? Greedy corporate bastards.
  • A cure for diabetic mice? My cat's diabetic, you insensitive clods!
  • by UbuntuDupe ( 970646 ) * on Saturday December 16, 2006 @07:37PM (#17272818) Journal
    it probably would have been easier to just quit tariffing sugar and subsidizing corn so that they stop using the bane we know as "high fructose corn syrup".

    I'm just sayin...

    • it probably would have been easier to just quit tariffing sugar and subsidizing corn so that they stop using the bane we know as "high fructose corn syrup".

      Oh, corn syrup causes Type I Diabetes? I thought it was from the
      government shipping "radioactive milk into black and poor communities" [omahaimc.org].

      After all, if you are going to spout off bullshit conspiracy theories to ward off scientific research, at least pick a good one.

      (BTW: I'm with you on the sugar subsidy thing. I can believe how much corn products are in

      • What bullshit conspiracy theory was I spouting?

        -It's well known that sugar has high tariffs in America.
        -It's well known that corn is highly subsidized in America.
        -It's well known that HFCS is used as a sweetener in many products, and that this is due to its low price compared to sugar.

        The controversial part was that it leads to diabetes. But that is at worst, a "crank medical theory" not a conspiracy theory. That's a completely different category.
        • Also, HFCS is linked to Type II Diabetes, not Type I --- just like most "junk food", as approximately 90% of Type II patients are obese.

          The fact that HFCS is used so widely, or even at all should be embarrasing to the American people. It's widely agreed upon that it tastes worse than raw sugar, is significantly unhealthier, and is more expensive to grow (without government subsidies). However, thanks to subsidized-capitalism, food manufacturers have little choice but to use HFCS in order to stay afloat.
    • Yeah! It'd be nice if your Coke tasted more like Coke than watery corn syrup.
  • by elgee ( 308600 )
    The cure will come a day after I assume room temperature. I have had it for 59 years. Hanging in there...
  • by NorbrookC ( 674063 ) on Saturday December 16, 2006 @08:19PM (#17273054) Journal
    http://www.cell.com/ [cell.com]

    The newspaper article is a not quite accurate either, although it has less hyperbole than the parent. What the study actually says is that it appears that the sensory nervous system is playing a role in the development and progression of diabetes. That is the "blockbuster", since it was thought to be an autoimmune disease.

    If verified, it provides yet another avenue of investigation into diabetes control and possibly cure, but this is a first study. A lot of work needs to be done to go between this and a standard treatment.

    Important? Yes. Break out the champagne and declare diabetes is cured? No.

  • by toonerh ( 518351 ) * on Saturday December 16, 2006 @09:23PM (#17273544)
    These are brave researchers to challenge the orthodox view of purely auto-immune diabetes. It reminds me of what resistance there was to redefining ulcers as a curable inflection, versus a psychological or personality flaw that was incurable or required surgery removing most of the stomach. In the end Drs. Warren and Marshall won a Nobel prize, but not before enduring years of abuse and almost having their careers destroyed. I hope medicine is more open to radical new ideas today.
    • by Animats ( 122034 )

      The diabetes-accessory industry is going to hate this.

      This will destroy a $20 billion a year industry.

  • Mice, pffft (Score:2, Informative)

    by dorpus ( 636554 )
    Hundreds of substances have already been demonstrated to cure mice of obesity, diabetes, or hypertension. They have all been published in prestigious journals as well. A few years ago, leptin was thought to be a wonder drug that would cure obesity in humans, because leptin caused mice to lose weight permanently.

    Of course, human metabolism has turned out to be far more complicated than mice. The only value of mice tests is to

    1. make sure it probably won't kill humans.
    2. demonstrate an effect, and claim th

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