It seems interesting ...
August 26, 2014 • News Diabetes, Home
A new study has found that type 1 diabetes and type 2 diabetes are the result of the same mechanism, specifically the formation of toxic lumps of a hormone called amiline.A thesis that breaks with the idea of treating the two types of diabetes in different ways.In the amiline the common link of both diseases could be.
The results, based on 20 years of work in New Zealand, suggest that type 1 diabetes and type 2 could potentially be reversed through medications that stop the formation of these toxic amiline groups.
In addition to producing insulin, pancreas cells also produce another hormone called amiline.Insulin and amiline normally work together to regulate body response to food intake.If they no longer occur, then blood sugar levels as we know rise causing diabetes and causing long -term damage in target organs such as heart, kidneys, eyes for example.Hence the good glycemic control is the key.
Returning to amiline, we now know that it occurs around the pancreas cells and that in its toxic version destroys the cells that produce insulin.The consequence of this cell death is diabetes.
An earlier investigation suggested that this is the mechanism causing type 2 diabetes. This new research provides strong evidence that type 1 diabetes develops equally.The difference is that the disease begins at an earlier age and progresses more rapidly in type 1 compared to type 2 because there is a faster deposition of toxic aggregates of the amiline in the pancreas.
Professor Garth Cooper at Manchester said they hope to have potential medications ready to enter clinical trials in the next two years.These tests are expected to be carried out shortly in patients type 1 and type 2. These clinical trials are planning with research groups in England and Scotland.