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Early insulin treatment beneficial for diabetics

Mechanisms of early insulin treatment for diabetes may produce better outcomes.

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Type 2 diabetes is a chronic disease in which there is a high level of glucose in the blood and is the most common type of diabetes.
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As per a recent study, mechanisms of early insulin treatment for diabetes may produce better outcomes. The pilot study of 23 adults with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes found early insulin therapy to be as effective as 15 months of oral therapy and may improve the body's ability to produce insulin. Type 2 diabetes is a lifelong (chronic) disease in which there is a high level of sugar (glucose) in the blood and is also the most common type of diabetes.

The current standard of care calls for initial treatment with oral therapies that suppress glucose production by the liver. In contrast, insulin is a hormone produced by the pancreas that allows the body to use glucose and prevents blood sugar levels from getting too high. If used early it can provide effective treatment with fewer metabolic side effects.

Researchers from Ohio University and Western University of Health Sciences College of Osteopathic Medicine have presented their updated findings at OMED 15 in Orlando.
In the randomised controlled trial, the insulin-treated group's A1C levels, decreased from 10.1 percent to 6.7 percent after 15 months. For people without diabetes, the normal range for the haemoglobin A1c test is between 4 percent and 5.6 percent.

The group receiving intensive oral therapy saw its A1C level drop from 9.9 percent to 6.8 percent at 15 months. The insulin treatment was well tolerated with no severe hypoglycaemia. While the intensive oral therapy group gained weight, insulin-treated subjects lost an average of five pounds.

While the improvement in glucose was relatively comparable between the two groups, the findings support the idea that the body can improve its natural insulin secreting ability when early insulin is given, said lead researcher Jay Shubrook, adding "This may be because early insulin therapy protects beta cells in the pancreas that respond to glucose and produce insulin."
Based on additional research published in the journal Cell Metabolism in 2014, the mechanism appears to be re-differentiation of beta cells, Shubrook said.

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