Friday, November 15, 2019
Transplants and Diabetes :: essays research papers
 Three Toronto scientists have developed an organ  transplant procedure that could, among its many  benefits, reverse diabetes. The procedure was  developed by Bernard Leibel, Julio Martin and  Walter Zingg at the University of Toronto and the  Hospital for Sick Children. The story of their work  began in 1978, when they delved into research  which had never before been tried. They wanted  to determine if the success rate of organ  transplants would increase if the recipient was  injected with minute amounts of organ tissue prior  to the transplant. The intention was to adapt the  recipient to the transplanted tissue and thereby  raise the threshold of rejection. In the case of the  diabetes experiment, this meant injecting rats with  pancreatic tissue before transplanting islets of  Langerhans, small clusters of cells scattered  throughout the pancreas which produce insulin,  glucagon, and somatostatin. In their first  experiment, outbred Wistar rats were injected  with increasing amounts of minced pancreas from  unrelated donor rats for one year while a control  group was left untreated. Then both the treated  and control groups received injections of  approximately 500-800 islets of Langerhans from  unrelated donors. Of the five treated animals, two  became clinically and biochemically permanently  normal. Six months later, Martin examined the  cured rats and found intact, functioning islets  secreting all of their hormones, including insulin.  None of the controls were cured. Encouraged by  their first results, Leibel, Martin, and Zingg  decided to repeat the experiment with rats with  much stronger immune barriers (higher levels of  rejection). Seven rats out of nine were cured. "We  set up a protocol and worked patiently with small  numbers," says Leibel, "but the results are  indisputable." In addition to reversing diabetes,  there are two other benefits to the pre-treatment  procedure, according to the scientists. The first is  that the pancreas produces all the other hormones  of a normal pancreas, not just insulin. The second  benefit is that the transplant recipient doesn't have  to take immunosuppressive drugs, which are so  toxic for diabetics. At present, diabetics who  receive a transplanted pancreas must take such    					    
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