New MIT Implant Device May Help Do Away with Insulin Injections

Type 1 diabetes is a life-long struggle and it can be tedious, cumbersome, and painful for those who have it. It requires regular maintenance and insulin injections which sounds like a heavy burden to bear for the rest of one’s life. So, in lieu of that, a team of MIT engineers are hoping that the implantable device that they developed would help diabetes patients.

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In trials, the implant kept the blood sugar levels of diabetic mice stable for a month. The team now hopes to scale the device to humans to help treat those with type 1 diabetes—and they believe it could be used to treat other diseases as well.

“You can think of this as a living medical device that is made from human cells that secrete insulin, along with an electronic life support-system,” senior author Daniel Anderson, a chemical engineer at MIT, said in a statement. “We’re excited by the progress so far, and we really are optimistic that this technology could end up helping patients.”

– from The Daily Beast

(Image credit: Dennis Klicker/Unsplash)

Source: neatorama

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