INDIAN
SCIENTISTS DEVELOP INSULIN PILL FOR DIABETICS
Nearly a century after the crucial
discovery of insulin, Indian scientists have developed a long-sought insulin
pill that could spare millions of diabetics around the world the pain of daily
jabs.
In experiments with rats, the 'pill' lowered blood
glucose levels almost as much as injected insulin.
In fact, the effects of the 'pill' lasted longer than that of injected insulin,
according to the study published in the American Chemical Society journal
Biomacromolecules.
For years, researchers have sought a way to transform delivery of insulin
therapy from a jab to a pill, but it has been a challenge.
The body's digestive enzymes that are so good at breaking down food also break
down insulin before it can get to work.
In addition, insulin does not get easily absorbed through the gut into the
bloodstream.
To overcome these hurdles, researchers from the National Institute of
Pharmaceutical Education and Research (NIPER) in Punjab, combined two
approaches to shield insulin from the digestive enzymes and then get it into
the blood.
The team, which included researchers Ashish Kumar Agrawal, Harshad Harde,
Kaushik Thanki and Sanyog Jain, packaged insulin in tiny sacs made of lipids,
or fats, called liposomes, which are already used in some treatments.
Then, they wrapped the liposomes in layers of protective molecules called
polyelectrolytes.
To help these "layersomes" get absorbed into the bloodstream, they
attached folic acid, a kind of vitamin B that has been shown to help transport
liposomes across the intestinal wall into the blood.
In rats, the delivery system lowered blood glucose levels almost as much as
injected insulin, though the effects of the layersomes lasted longer than that
of injected insulin.
An estimated 347 million people globally are living with diabetes, a condition
where the body fails to utilise the ingested glucose properly.
This could be due to lack of the hormone insulin or because the insulin that is
available is not working effectively.
Diabetics must test their blood sugar several times a day, and need insulin
jabs for the rest of their lives in order to maintain adequate levels of the
hormone.
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