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Medicine Science

Scientists Are Working On Ways To Swap the Needle For a Pill (npr.org) 58

An anonymous reader quotes a report from NPR: One team of scientists, from MIT's Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research and Harvard's Brigham and Women's Hospital, developed a system to deliver insulin that actually still uses a needle -- but is so small you can swallow it and the injection doesn't hurt. They built a pea-size device containing a spring that ejects a tiny dart of solid insulin into the wall of the stomach, says gastroenterologist Carlo Giovanni Traverso, an associate physician at Brigham and Women's Hospital. "We chose the stomach as the site of delivery because we recognized that the stomach is a thick and robust part of the GI tract," Traverso says. Once the device gets into the stomach, the humidity there allows the spring to launch the insulin dart. As the researchers report in the journal Science, they've tested the device on pigs, and it can deliver a therapeutic dose of insulin provided the pig has an empty stomach.

On the other side of the U.S., nanoengineer Ronnie Fang of the University of California, San Diego and his colleagues have a different delivery system. Theirs is a kind of ingestible microrocket, about the size of a grain of sand, that is designed to zip past the stomach and into the small intestine. "It actually propels [itself] using bubbles in a reaction of magnesium with biological fluids," Fang says. The rocket has a coating that protects its payload from the acidic and enzyme-filled environment of the stomach. Once the rocket enters the small intestine, the change in acidity causes the coating to dissolve and lets the rocket stick to the intestinal wall to release its payload, in this case a vaccine protein. As Fang and his colleagues report in Nano Letters, their delivery system works in mice, but human testing is probably many years off.

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Scientists Are Working On Ways To Swap the Needle For a Pill

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday February 07, 2019 @11:38PM (#58087482)

    As a guy who has been using it for at least ten years, most of the time it doesn't hurt. Even when it does, it is not massive pain.

  • Great! Only $3.14 million a year.

  • Eat a spring-loaded micro-injection pill to accomplish a minor convenience. What could go wrong. Yeah don't work on curing cancer, make a bullshit product instead. Great work Harvard/MIT money-grubs.

    • These are totally different types of research.

      Do you honestly think every scientist in the world is sitting around working on the same problem, or even informed on the same subjects?

  • by Dorianny ( 1847922 ) on Friday February 08, 2019 @12:49AM (#58087674) Journal
    Look forward to having 30 cent insulin needles be replaced with 300 dollar pills, not even talking about the actual insulin of course
    • Resistence is futile. You will be assimilated.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    It's shocking how out of touch medical science can be. The problem with shots - for people who have fear of them - was never about the pain. It was the bone-deep aversion to sharp objects being stuck in the skin. Just knowing it's going in. Whether it hurts or not is utterly irrelevant. A "painless" needle is just as uncomfortable as a painful one. Perhaps even more so, because at least with the physical pain it can disctract you from the thought of what the needle entails. It's difficult to understand for

    • by mentil ( 1748130 )

      Some people with needle phobia, perhaps. Others actually fear injection pain, which is why devices like the ShotBlocker [bionix.com] exist.

    • That's the thing though, a painless needle they can go without knowing how it works and just take it as "take pill, get better"

      The sight of the needle typically is what sets off those kind of people and their fear. No needle to see, and no one telling them how that pill works means that fear stays locked away

  • Reminds me of "Innerspace".
  • I hit the city and I lost my band [youtu.be]
    I watched the lozenge take another man
    Gone, gone, the damage done

    Sorry. That just doesn't ring for me like the original [genius.com].

  • Two things I didn't see mentioned in the linked article, but will be addressed at some point, is the fact that the dose of insulin can vary wildly depending on current blood glucose level (take more to get it back to the target), and food consumption (more food = more insulin). (So lots of pills of a single dose, several pills of varying doses, or fill the pills yourself?)
    The other thing I don't recall seeing was how fast the body absorbs the insulin delivered into the stomach lining compared to the (rough

  • by Joosy ( 787747 ) on Friday February 08, 2019 @03:04AM (#58087984)

    It actually propels [itself] using bubbles in a reaction of magnesium with biological fluids

    If instead of magnesium it used a sodium reaction it would propel itself much faster, and at the same time would provide a dramatic cure for constipation.

  • I'm not going to shill for a specific pharmaceutical product by mentioning it's name, but oddly enough, DVR and I-don't-watch-commercials-or-not, I managed to notice there is a product on the market that is an inhaled version of insulin.
  • I can hear Q's narration in my head: "Now pay attention, 007. This pill contains a magnesium micro-rocket that ignites on contact with stomach acid. The blue pill delivers a needle with a fast-acting poison, and the red pill implants a tracking device that will remain embedded in the intestinal lining for up to two weeks. If you should use one...please, do us both a favor and don't recover it!"
    • I can hear Q's narration in my head: "Now pay attention, 007.

      I think Q always called him "Picard". 7 (of nine) and Q never met, AFAIK.

  • I remember going shopping with my mom and they'd have boxes of single use syringes on the shelf for people to buy. My sister has type I diabetes and so needs insulin injections. Each box seemed quite inexpensive as I recall, otherwise they would not be out in the open on the shelf for people to grab while shopping. Then one day they disappeared.

    You see the illegal drug abusers were buying these same syringes for their habit and we can't have that, apparently. The "people who know best" in government req

  • I can see how this might be beneficial for those who are afraid of needles... But Idk how it will be possible considering pills will take time to process.

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