Mechanism of insulin release in normal pancreatic beta cells (i.e., glucose dependence). Insulin production does not depend on blood glucose levels; insulin is stored pending release
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Diabetes, insulin dependent

Diabetes mellitus is a medical disorder characterized by varying or persistent hyperglycemia (elevated blood sugar levels), especially after eating. All types of diabetes mellitus share similar symptoms and complications at advanced stages. Hyperglycemia itself can lead to dehydration and ketoacidosis. Longer-term complications include cardiovascular disease (doubled risk), chronic renal failure (it is the main cause for dialysis), retinal damage which can lead to blindness, nerve damage which can lead to erectile dysfunction (impotence), gangrene with risk of amputation of toes, feet, and even legs. more...

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The more serious complications are more common in people who have a difficult time controlling their blood sugars with medications (glycemic control).

The most important forms of diabetes are due to decreased or the complete absence of the production of insulin (type 1 diabetes), or decreased sensitivity of body tissues to insulin (type 2 diabetes, the more common form). The former requires insulin injections for survival; the latter is generally managed with diet, weight reduction and exercise in about 20% of cases, though the majority require these strategies plus oral medication (insulin is used if the tablets are ineffective).

Patient understanding and participation is vital as blood glucose levels change continuously. Treatments which return the blood sugar to normal levels can reduce or prevent development of the complications of diabetes. Other health problems that accelerate the damaging effects of diabetes are smoking, elevated cholesterol levels, obesity, high blood pressure, and lack of regular exercise.

History

Although diabetes has been recognized since antiquity, and treatments were known since the Middle Ages, the elucidation of the pathogenesis of diabetes occurred mainly in the 20th century6.

Until 1921, when insulin was first discovered and made clinically available, a clinical diagnosis of what we now call type 1 diabetes was an invariable death sentence, more or less quickly. Non-progressing type 2 diabetics almost certainly often went undiagnosed then; many still do.

The discovery of the role of the pancreas in diabetes is generally credited to Joseph Von Mering and Oskar Minkowski, two European researchers who, in 1889, found that when they completely removed the pancreas of dogs, the dogs developed all the signs and symptoms of diabetes and died shortly afterward. In 1910, Sir Edward Albert Sharpey-Schafer of Edinburgh in Scotland suggested diabetics were deficient in a single chemical that was normally produced by the pancreas - he proposed calling this substance insulin.

The endocrine role of the pancreas in metabolism, and indeed the existence of insulin, was not fully clarified until 1921, when Sir Frederick Grant Banting and Charles Herbert Best repeated the work of Von Mering and Minkowski but went a step further and managed to show that they could reverse the induced diabetes in dogs by giving them an extract from the pancreatic islets of Langerhans of healthy dogs7. They went on to isolate the hormone insulin from bovine pancreases at the University of Toronto in Canada.

This led to the availability of an effective treatment - insulin injections - and the first clinical patient was treated in 1922. For this, Banting et al received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1923. The two researchers made the patent available and did not attempt to control commercial production. Insulin production and therapy rapidly spread around the world, largely as a result of their decision.

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Clinician's Manual on Non-Insulin Dependent Diabetes Mellitus. - Review - book reviews
From Age and Ageing, 9/1/98 by J.R. Playfer

Clinician's Manual on Non-Insulin Dependent Diabetes Mellitus Paul Zimmet and Matthew Cohen

London: Science Press, 1997. 56pp, 7.25 [pounds sterling]

These two pocket-size books from Science Press are very attractively produced, illustrated and reassuringly concise. This type of product is usually thrust into one's hand by a medical representative or gleaned from an exhibition stand at major meetings. They perform quite a useful role as a reinforcer of continuing medical education.

Each of these books is equivalent to a three-quarters of an hour to an hour review lecture on their individual subjects. They have the advantage over a lecture in that one can return to the illustrations, perhaps managing to extract material for one's own teaching and practice.

Avioli's book on osteoporosis takes a distinctly North Atlantic approach and the variation in availability of drugs between the UK and the USA does make some of the advice on practical management less relevant. Nevertheless, the book is extremely clear on the clinical features and diagnosis of osteoporosis. Although there is not enough detail for the person who already has specialized knowledge in this field, it would nevertheless be useful to quite a wide range of health-care workers from nurses and medical students up to the consultant who has no specialised interest in the condition. Although brief, the end section on further reading and references is excellent, and I am sure this attractive volume will obtain wide currency.

Zimmet and Cohen's short manual has a lot more competition in the market since many similarly sized books have been produced on the management of diabetes. Nevertheless, it is a very attractive volume and again would span a wide range of health-care professionals' needs. The clarity of the layout of this book makes for very easy reference and its unambiguous advice certainly reflects its Australian origins. I think it could have been strengthened by some references and guides to further reading but, as a refresher of knowledge, it would be hard to beat.

J. R. PLAYFER

Consultant Physician in Geriatric Medicine,

Liverpool

COPYRIGHT 1998 Oxford University Press
COPYRIGHT 2000 Gale Group

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