Category: Research

Picture of Pancreas

Diabetes Cure Research: Turning Duct Cells into Beta Cells

Bonner-Weir and other scientists have argued that either the beta cells in the pancreas continue to make copies of themselves, or that the pancreatic ducts, through a process called budding or neurogenesis, continue producing new cells.
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Volunteers Needed for NIH Diabetes Study

If you've been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes in the last 5 years, you may be eligible to help scientists test treatments by participating in an NIH study. NIH has launched a long-term clinical trial called the GRADE study. Researchers will examine the benefits and risks of common diabetes drugs used with metformin.
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Researchers Identify Those at High Risk for Type 1 Diabetes

Great strides have been made recently in predicting who is most likely to develop type 1 diabetes, allowing researchers to identify the disease at the earliest stages of development and potentially intervene to preserve beta cell function at a much earlier stage and ultimately prevent onset of symptomatic diabetes.
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Biodel to Produce Glucagon Rescue Product

Biodel has announced plans to submit a New Drug Application (NDA) to the FDA in 2015 for a novel glucagon rescue device to treat severe hypoglycemia. Having previously signed a long-term commercial supply agreement for bulk glucagon, Biodel expects to select a final formulation of its novel glucagon therapy...
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Type 2 Diabetes in Youth More Aggressive Than in Adults, Even When Treated

According to a series of study results being published in a special issue of Diabetes Care youth with type 2 diabetes experience a more rapid progression of co-morbidities far more aggressive than what is typically seen in adults, even when they receive the best currently available treatment and close monitoring of their condition.
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T-cell Regulation home

Cure for Type 1 Diabetes and MS? Discovery of Immune Suppressing Protein CD52

Dr. Harrison and his team identified that some T cells express a molecule on their surfaces, CD52, that is capable of suppressing other T cells. Understanding the ways in which the immune system normally controls and suppresses T cells is crucial to our understanding what goes wrong in autoimmune diseases.
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Islet Cell Transplant Progress May Lead to Type 1 Diabetes Cure

The biomaterial holding the islet cells—which is completely synthetic, is 96 percent water, and which Garcia described as having the consistency of diluted Jello-O—and that was infused into the mice, however, addresses several of these problems.
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