Drug appears to reverse type 1 diabetes in mice
A new type 1 diabetes drug hides insulin-making beta cells from the immune system and shields them from attack, a study with mice shows.
A new type 1 diabetes drug hides insulin-making beta cells from the immune system and shields them from attack, a study with mice shows.
A new type 1 diabetes drug hides insulin-making beta cells from the immune system and shields them from attack, a study with mice shows.
A new type 1 diabetes drug hides insulin-making beta cells from the immune system and shields them from attack, a study with mice shows.
An expert discusses the basics of insulin resistance, how the condition affects your health, and the steps you can take to reverse it.
This “could possibly be the most dramatic change in treating type 1 diabetes since the discovery of insulin in 1921.”
A hormone called GDF15 makes insulin work better in rodents, report researchers. Could it be a way to treat diabetes in humans?
For the first time, researchers are using music, including Queen’s “We Will Rock You,” to stimulate insulin release from cells.
For the first time, researchers are using music, including Queen’s “We Will Rock You,” to stimulate insulin release from cells.
Until now, researchers have not known much about the first steps of insulin synthesis, but a new study solves part of the mystery.
A new discovery provides a tool for developing better insulin preparations that millions of people around the world depend on.