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  • Diabetes mellitus has been a scourge of the developed world

  • with an estimated 400,000,000 people worldwide suffering from this disease,

  • and 50% more predicted within twenty years.

  • Its early symptoms, which include increased thirst and large volumes of urine,

  • were recognized as far back as 1500 BCE in Egypt.

  • While the term diabetes, meaning "to pass through,"

  • was first used in 250 BCE by the Greek physician Apollonius of Memphis,

  • Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes,

  • associated respectively with youth and obesity,

  • were identified as separate conditions

  • by Indian physicians somewhere in the 5th century CE.

  • But despite the disease being known, a diagnosis of diabetes in a human patient

  • would remain tantamount to a death sentence until the early 20th century,

  • its causes unknown.

  • What changed this dire situation was the help of humanity's longtime animal partner:

  • canis lupus familiaris, domesticated from grey wolves thousands of years ago.

  • In 1890, the German scientists von Mering and Minkowski

  • demonstrated that removing a dog's pancreas

  • caused it to develop all the signs of diabetes,

  • thus establishing the organ's central role in the disease.

  • But the exact mechanism by which this occurred remained a mystery until 1920

  • when a young Canadian surgeon named Frederick Banting

  • and his student, Charles Best, advanced the findings of their German colleagues.

  • Working under Professor Macleod at the University of Toronto,

  • they confirmed that the pancreas was responsible for regulating blood glucose,

  • successfully treating diabetic dogs by injecting them with an extract

  • they had prepared from pancreas tissue.

  • By 1922, the researchers working with biochemist James Collip

  • were able to develop a similar extract from beef pancreas

  • to first treat a fourteen-year-old diabetic boy,

  • followed by six additional patients.

  • The manufacturing process for this extract, now known as insulin,

  • was eventually turned over to a pharmaceutical company

  • that makes different types of injectable insulin to this day.

  • Banting and Macleod received

  • the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1923 for their discovery.

  • But Banting chose to share his portion with Charles Best,

  • for his help in the initial studies involving dogs.

  • But while medical experimentation on animals remains controversial,

  • in this case at least, it was not just a matter of exploiting dogs for human needs.

  • Dogs develop diabetes at the rate of two cases per 1,000 dogs,

  • almost the same as that of humans under 20.

  • Most canine cases are of Type 1 diabetes,

  • similar to the type that young children develop

  • following immune system destruction of the pancreas,

  • and genetic studies have shown that

  • the dog disease has many similar hallmarks of the human disease.

  • This has allowed veterinarians to turn the tables,

  • successfully using insulin to treat diabetes in men's best friend for over 60 years.

  • Many dog owners commit to managing their dogs' diabetes

  • with insulin injected twice daily, regimented feedings,

  • and periodic blood measurements

  • using the same home testing glucose monitors used by human patients.

  • And if the purifed pig insulin commonly used for dogs

  • fails to work for a particular dog,

  • the vet may even turn to a formulation of human insulin,

  • bringing the process full circle.

  • After all that dogs have done for us throughout the ages,

  • including their role in a medical discovery that has saved countless human lives,

  • using that same knowledge to help them is the least we could do.

Diabetes mellitus has been a scourge of the developed world

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