Saturday, 20 July 2013

Controlled insulin delivery via injectable 'smart sponge'

esearchers have developed a drug delivery technique for diabetes treatment in which a sponge-like material surrounds an insulin core. The sponge expands and contracts in response to blood sugar levels to release insulin as needed. The technique could also be used for targeted drug delivery to cancer cells.

"We wanted to mimic the function of health beta-cells, which produce insulin and control its release in a healthy body," says Dr. Zhen Gu, lead author of a paper describing the work and an assistant professor in the joint biomedical engineering program at North Carolina State University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "But what we've found also holds promise for smart drug delivery targeting cancer or other diseases." The research team includes Daniel Anderson, the senior author and an associate professor of chemical engineering and member of the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT, and researchers from the Department of Anesthesiology at Boston Children's Hospital.
The researchers created a spherical, sponge-like matrix out of chitosan, a material found in shrimp and crab shells. Scattered throughout this matrix are smaller nanocapsules made of a porous polymer that contain glucose oxidase or catalase enzymes. The sponge-like matrix surrounds a reservoir that contains insulin. The entire matrix sphere is approximately 250 micrometers in diameter and can be injected into a patient.
When a diabetic patient's blood sugar rises, the glucose triggers a reaction that causes the nanocapsules' enzymes to release hydrogen ions. Those ions bind to the molecular strands of the chitosan sponge, giving them a positive charge. The positively charged chitosan strands then push away from each other, creating larger gaps in the sponge's pores that allow the insulin to escape into the bloodstream. In type 1 and advanced type 2 diabetes, the body needs injections of insulin, a hormone that transports glucose - or blood sugar - from the bloodstream into the body's cells.
As the insulin is released, the body's glucose levels begin to drop. This causes the chitosan to lose its positive charge, and the strands begin to come back together. This shrinks the size of the pores in the sponge, trapping the remaining insulin.
While this work created hydrogen ions by using enzymes that are responsive to glucose, the technique could be simplified to target cancers by eliminating the enzymes altogether. Tumors are acidic environments that have high concentrations of hydrogen ions. If the sponge reservoir were filled with anticancer drugs, the drugs would be released when the chitosan came into contact with the hydrogen ions in tumor tissues or cancer cells.
"We can also adjust the size of the overall 'sponge' matrix as needed, as small as 100 nanometers," Gu says. "And the chitosan itself can be absorbed by the body, so there are no long term health effects."
In tests using diabetic laboratory mice, the researchers found the sponge matrix was effective at reducing blood sugar for up to 48 hours. However, the researchers published a separate "smart system" for insulin delivery in May that maintained normal blood sugar levels for 10 days.
"But we learned a lot from the promising 'sponge' research and will further optimize it. Meanwhile, we are already exploring applications to combat cancer," Gu says.

Lyrica Side Effects

vMy wife has been off Lyrica for seven weeks and is still suffering side effects, hypersensitivity, blood overheating, itchiness, a feeling at times that someone else is taking over her body. She is getting very depressed. She was only on them for three weeks 50mg twice a day . Has any one else had long term side effects and how long are they likely to last? how do you alleviate the side effects?My wife has been off Lyrica for seven weeks and is still suffering side effects, hypersensitivity, blood overheating, itchiness, a feeling at times that someone else is taking over her body. She is getting very depressed. She was only on them for three weeks 50mg twice a day . Has any one else had long term side effects and how long are they likely to last? how do you alleviate the side effects?

It is now nine weeks since she last took Lyrica, She gets some relief at night if she takes Anphatripalin (Sorry about spelling) or Paracetamol, but gets very depressed and does not want to continue living like this. She has an appointment in ten days with a consultant neurologist it will be interesting to se what he advises. I ma getting very worried. Any body any ideas on how long this will last. My advice the drug should be banned.

Rosacea & Sodium Chloride Effect

Rosacea turned out to be a deficiency of salt, as I found out from doing some experimenting with diet. See if this doesn't make sense.

A patient is on a long-term low-salt diet for any number of reasons: to lose weight, high blood pressure, etc. After years of this there isn't enough chlorine in the system (chlorine molecule in salt [NaCL]) for the stomach to make Hydrochloric acid (HCL). Food won't digest. The blood contains salt so the body flushes larger than usual amounts of blood into the stomach area to aid in digestion. The mouth & nose are part of the digestive system, so extra blood flushes in here as well. This is a chronic problem so large amounts of blood are flushing into the facial area daily, especially after a meal. For people who blush easily (veins & capillaries that stretch easily & become enlarged quickly ) rosacea develops as these blood vessels become increasingly stretched and damaged. By this time the body is quite low on salt and does not contain the usual cup or 3/4 cup of salt that is part of good health. It takes several months of a higher salt diet for the problem to go away.

This extra protein that is produced, well I don't know how that fits in except maybe the body starts making it as kind of a protection for these damaged blood vessels in the face.

Anal Itch

I think I caught something while having anal sex from the Canadian guy who came to visit me and did not use a condom. I met him on Lavalife. He say he never use condoms with any of his encounters.


I started to have anal itching in 1994 and as it continued (because no doctors' prescriptions were effective), my vulvar area itched too. Both itching occurred daily but only when I lied in bed when I slept. Eventually after a few years, both the anus and vulvar area became very painful thoughout the whole day, and particularly more painful when I went to the toilet. I've tried parasites pills, yeast and bacteria tests, non-perfumed soap, cotton underwear, keeping the area dry, and none worked. In around 2002, I found a dermitologist doctor who gave me a cream that stopped the pain and itch, but I have to keep using that cream about once every 4 to 5 days. Finally in July 2010, I began to suspect that the laundry detergent might be the reason. So I started to use an all-natural-ingredients laundry detergent, and I reduced the amount I used for each load from 4/5 of a cup to 1/5 of a cup. And luckily and miraculously, within two weeks, my itchiness has gone, and I did not have to apply the cream any more, and that lasted for 9 months until March this year. Then the itch came back (probably because I have used too much detergent for one or two loads) for about 4 weeks. So I watched the amount of detergent that I put in each load carefully, and the itch has not re-occurred. Will keep you posted.

Innovative smart knife

ascinating article. An amazing innovation that has fantastic potential for surgical procedures involving cancer.

ascinating article. An amazing innovation that has fantastic potential for surgical procedures involving cancer.

We aren't safe anywhere

It seems like everyone day I'm hearing of some hospital, some community center, etc have mercer infection. I find it amazing we haven't been able to solve this problem. We aren't safe anywhere


Do We? Hear our inner voices?

thought that 'hearing voices' was a sign is schizophrenia. (Which I do not have -- just a little tinnitus!) 

When you say 'hear' -- do you REALLY mean "Hear"? Or do you just mean "thinking in words"?