A cure in mice does not automatically translate into humans, unfortunately. We have cured mice using many methods already.
This research is more "basic science" research, and is a long way off from clinically helping human Type 1 diabetics tomorrow.
The media also often doesn't always present the facts straight. I am cautiously optomistic, and suggest we wait and see.
Here is an article relating to the topic:
Canadian Scientists Close in on Diabetes Cure
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Team finds hope for diabetes cure
Dec. 15, 2006. 07:02 AM
MEGAN OGILVIE
HEALTH REPORTER
A Toronto-led team of researchers has discovered a trigger for Type 1 diabetes, a breakthrough that has long evaded scientists and could lead the way to preventing the disease.
The team found that abnormal nerve endings in the insulin-producing cells of the pancreas initiated a chain of events that caused Type 1 diabetes in mice. When they removed the nerve cells, the mice did not develop the disorder.
That means diabetes may be a disease of the nervous system, not just an autoimmune disease, said Dr. Hans Michael Dosch, a senior scientist at the Hospital for Sick Children and the study's main investigator.
Until now, research has primarily focused on the immune system and why it attacks and destroys the insulin-producing cells, called islets.
But Dosch, working with colleagues at Sick Kids, the University of Calgary and Maine's Jackson Laboratory, identified a control circuit between islet cells and their related sensory nerves. Disrupting this circuit led to inflammation around the islets and eventually to their destruction. Without these cells, the mice could not make insulin.
"This control circuit is the real cause of diabetes," Dosch said.
Experts say the findings, reported yesterday in the journal Cell, will change the way scientists think about diabetes.
"It really is a breakthrough for the diabetes community," said Pam Ohashi, a professor of immunology at the University of Toronto and a senior scientist at the Campbell Family Institute for Breast Cancer Research.
Dosch has immediate plans to move his research from mice to humans. He is launching a clinical trial in January to figure out if patients who have a high risk of Type 1 diabetes have the same sensory nerve abnormalities.
"If they do, then we have fantastic new therapeutic strategies," said Dosch, who is also a professor of pediatrics and immunology at U of T.
Michelle Wing knows the toll diabetes brings to a family. Her 8-year-old daughter Marielle has the disease, and her two young sons, ages 4 and 18 months, are at high risk of getting it.
Diabetes affects every aspect of their lives, she said, describing how the Oakville family is bound by an extensive routine of blood tests, insulin injections and strict meal times. Dosch plans to invite the family to join the clinical trial.
Wing said she came close to tears after hearing that researchers may have found a way to one day prevent Type 1 diabetes.
"Seeing what Marielle goes through every day of her life, to prevent other children from going through that," Wing said. "To prevent other parents in the middle of the night worrying their child will go into a diabetic coma...
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`It's fantastic that there could be a prevention of this for other children'
Michelle Wing, whose daughter has diabetes and two sons are at risk of getting it
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``It's fantastic that there could be a prevention of this for other children."
Toronto has a long history of diabetes research, including the discovery of insulin by Dr. Frederick Banting and Charles Best in 1921-22.
More than 200,000 Canadians have Type 1 diabetes, which most people get as children or teenagers. It should not be confused with the more common Type 2 diabetes, where the body doesn't make enough insulin or doesn't use the insulin it makes.
Insulin is a hormone produced by the islet cells that helps regulate blood sugar levels in the body.
People with Type 1 diabetes have to take daily insulin injections and regularly monitor their blood sugars. But the injections aren't a cure and they can't prevent side effects such as stroke, blindness, heart attack and kidney failure.
In the lab mice, so-called TRPV1 sensory neurons produced a specific kind of neuropeptide responsible for maintaining a healthy environment for the insulin-producing islet cells. If the balance was disrupted in any way, the immune system launched an attack on the islets, triggering Type 1 diabetes.
Eliminating these neurons or stopping their signals to the immune system prevented the chain of events that initiate Type 1 diabetes.
More research is needed to find out if this theory will work in humans, not to mention if it will shed light on new therapies for Type 2 diabetes, Dosch said.
In a reversal of what they expected, the researchers also found injecting substance P a chemical secreted by nerve cells into mice whose islet cells were inflamed and on the way to being destroyed not only eliminated the inflammation but reversed it.
"The blood glucose normalizes overnight and it stays low for weeks to months this is with a single shot," Dosch said.
"We now have 4-month-old mice that are non-diabetic that used to be diabetic" a period equivalent to six to eight years in humans.
The research is still in its early days, cautioned Dr. Ehud Ur, professor of medicine at Dalhousie University and chair of the clinical and scientific section of the Canadian Diabetes Association. Like other experts, he is less convinced about whether diabetes can be cured, noting the team's findings have no relevance to people who already have Type 1 diabetes.
Still, he added, the discovery that nerves are involved in regulating the pancreas opens up new avenues of research.
"We have a whole new target for therapy.
``It's always been the pancreas or the immune system. Now we have a new player."
With files from Canadian Press
2006-12-15 16:08:31
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answer #1
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answered by reginachick22 6
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2016-05-19 22:37:13
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answer #2
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answered by ? 3
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2016-09-17 16:27:00
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answer #3
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answered by Carey 3
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I am writing to tell you what an incredible impact these methods had on my life! I have had type 2 diabetes for 27 years. For me, the worst part of this horrible disease is the severe pain I constantly get in my feet. The pain is so bad that I avoid standing and walking as much as possible. I've got to tell you that within the first month, my feet stopped hurting altogether and I can now walk totally pain free.
Believe it or not, I even danced at my niece's wedding last month, something I have not done in a many years. I've been following the book for six months now and my blood sugar is well within normal range. I feel great!
I recommend you use the Type 2 Diabetes Destroyer to naturally reverse your diabetes.
2016-05-14 17:53:55
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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Depends on what kind of Diabetes you have, there are quite a few.
Type one Diabetics have damage to their pancreas, they put out no/very little insulin, no cure for this problem as of today.
Type 2 Diabetics mainly have a problems with their bodies tissues being Insulin resistance. You can lower your bodies resistance to insulin by doing the following:
Get to your ideal body-weight/ lean body.
Intense exercise.
Eat a diet that causes you to excrete less insulin (your damaged/insensitive insulin receptors will eventually start working better). When you have high insulin levels it damages your insulin receptors.
People can cure themselves of Type 2 diabetes, although it is a long process.
2015-02-26 09:36:03
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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I have not heard that. But, one study would not lead to a new drug. It would take many studies before the FDA would approve a drug like that. I highly doubt that there is a cure for Diabetes. Maybe something to increase the production of insulin, but not a cure.
2006-12-15 12:58:25
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answer #6
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answered by Flipper 2
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Shocking New Diabetes Research Revealed - http://Help.DiabetesGoGo.com
2016-02-13 02:13:58
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answer #7
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answered by ? 3
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That article refers to helping type 1 diabetics and is great news, but a ways off, I'm afraid. In the mean time, folks might want their children to avoid cow's milk since at least two studies have linked its consumption in humans with type 1 diabetes. (see the type 1 links on my diabetes info webpage for more)
Type 2, on the other hand, is a different story... It has more to do with insulin resistance (at least in the beginning) than with lack of insulin production. All one has to do to minimize type 2's affects is follow a proper diet, take a few supplements, keep their weight down, and exercise regularly. I'm not making this stuff up. My most recent HbA1C results were 5.8 (that's considered non-diabetic). I've posted all kinds of helpful stuff on my diabetes info webpage for those type 2s who really want to live a long and healthy life and avoid the complications of high blood sugar:
http://www.geocities.com/seabulls69/Type_II_Diabetes.html
2006-12-15 15:54:43
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answer #8
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answered by Mr. Peachy® 7
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I wish it could be true. I need a cure like that..however, even if there is a miracle drug found...by the time it is tested and approved for human consumption, most of us with diabetes will be either gone or too far along to be cured completely, in my opinion. You are right about the big drug companies not wanting to manufacture it, unless they could charge exorbitant rates for it. It's the same principle that keeps the oil companies from advancing electric cars. There's nothing in it for t hem.
2006-12-15 13:01:21
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answer #9
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answered by dbarnes3 4
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My mother had type 2 diabetes and through a strict diet she was cured. Proper dieting can indeed eliminate diabetes check out this link bit.ly/1jTUThc
2014-01-14 14:45:35
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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Scientifically-Proven Way To ERASE Your Diabetes in 3 SHORT weeks...
2014-04-14 22:13:31
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answer #11
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answered by Anonymous
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