Wednesday, January 10, 2007

An Insulin Pill on the Way?

Filed under: Medicine , Nanomedicine , Pediatrics

Researchers from the National Tsing Hua University in Taiwan are reporting using chitosan nanoparticles to coat insulin for a possible therapeutic oral delivery.

From the press release by the American Chemical Society:

Scientists in Taiwan are reporting development of a nanoparticle drug delivery system that shows promise as a potential way to administer insulin and perhaps other protein-based drugs by mouth rather than injection or nasal sprays.

Hsing-Wen Sung and colleagues at the National Tsing Hua University, the Chinese Naval Academy and the National Health Research Institute point out that stomach acid destroys protein-based drugs, making them ineffective. That problem has led to broadly based efforts to find ways of encapsulating or otherwise protecting insulin from damage in the stomach so it could be given in a convenient oral form. Once the drug passes through the stomach, it can be absorbed in the small intestine.

In their new research, scheduled for the Jan. 8 issue of ACS' Biomacromolecules, a monthly journal, researchers describe loading insulin into nanospheres made from chitosan, a natural carbohydrate polymer material obtained commercially from shells of shrimp that is nontoxic and biocompatible. When given to diabetic laboratory rats, the insulin-loaded nanoparticles successfully reduced blood sugar levels in the animals.

Press release...

Link to Preparation and Characterization of Nanoparticles Shelled with Chitosan for Oral Insulin Delivery (Biomacromolecules, 8 (1), 146 -152, 2007.)...

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replies: 2 comments
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My husband suffers from diabetes and has to inject insulin. If they can come up with an oral route, they will make billions. It's a hard disease to deal with and does so much damage.


Posted by: NPs Save Lives
on January 10, 2007 01:57 PM GMT

The diabetics are a damned lot not for a while but for many decades. Such news is not of any consequence unless the drug hits the market. They should, wel,l publish the approximate time and keep it up!
KR Dasharathi


Posted by: KR Dasharathi
on November 5, 2007 08:23 PM GMT

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