What did dogs teach humans about diabetes Duncan C. Ferguson

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 14-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 man’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 purified 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.

糖尿病一直是发达国家的祸害

全世界估计有 400,000,000 人
患有这种疾病

,预计
20 年内将增加 50%。

它的早期症状

,包括口渴
和大量尿液,

早在公元前 1500 年就已在埃及被发现。

虽然糖尿病一词的
意思是“通过

”,但在公元前 250 年

,孟菲斯的希腊医生 Apollonius 首次使用了糖尿病这一术语

,但分别与青年和肥胖相关的 1 型和 2 型糖尿病被印度医生

确定为不同的

疾病。 公元5世纪。

但是,尽管这种疾病是已知的,但直到 20 世纪初,

在人类患者中诊断出糖尿病

仍无异于
判处死刑


其原因尚不清楚。

改变这种可怕局面的

是人类
长期的动物伙伴的帮助:

犬狼疮,它是几千年前

从灰狼驯化而来的

1890 年,德国科学家
冯·梅林 (Von Mering) 和闵可夫斯基 (Minkowski)

证明,
切除狗的胰腺会

导致其
出现糖尿病的所有迹象,

从而确定该器官
在疾病中的核心作用。

直到 1920 年,发生这种情况的确切机制仍然是一个谜,

当时一位名叫弗雷德里克班廷的年轻加拿大外科医生

和他的学生查尔斯贝斯特

推进
了他们德国同事的研究结果。

在多伦多大学 Macleod 教授的带领下

他们证实了胰腺
负责调节血糖,

通过向糖尿病犬注射

他们从胰腺组织中制备的提取物,成功治疗了糖尿病犬。

到 1922 年,
与生物化学家 James Collip 合作的研究

人员能够从牛肉胰腺中开发出一种类似的提取物

,首先治疗一名 14 岁的糖尿病男孩,

然后再治疗六名患者。

这种提取物(现在称为胰岛素)

的制造过程最终移交
给了一家制药公司


该公司至今仍生产不同类型的可注射胰岛素。

班廷和麦克劳德

因为他们的发现获得了 1923 年的诺贝尔医学奖。

但班廷选择
与查尔斯·贝斯特分享他的部分,

因为他在涉及狗的初步研究中提供了帮助

但是,虽然
对动物的医学实验仍然存在争议,但

至少在这种情况下,

这不仅仅是
为了人类需要而剥削狗的问题。

狗患糖尿病的比率
为每 1,000 只狗 2 例,


20 岁以下的人类几乎相同。

大多数犬类病例属于 1 型糖尿病,

类似于幼儿

在胰腺免疫系统破坏后发展的类型,

以及遗传 研究表明

,犬类疾病具有许多
与人类疾病相似的特征。

这让
兽医扭转了局面,

成功地使用
胰岛素治疗

了人类最好朋友 60 多年的糖尿病。

许多狗主人承诺
通过

每天两次注射胰岛素、有
规律的喂食

和使用人类患者

使用的相同的家庭
血糖监测仪定期进行血液测量来控制他们的狗的糖尿病。

如果通常用于狗的纯化猪胰岛素

对特定的狗不起作用

,兽医甚至可能会
转向人胰岛素的配方,

从而使整个过程循环。

毕竟,狗
在各个时代为我们所做的一切,

包括它们

拯救无数人生命的医学发现中的作用,

使用同样的知识
来帮助它们是我们至少能做的。