You can view the current or previous issues of Diabetes Health online, in their entirety, anytime you want.
Click Here To View
See if you qualify for our free healthcare professional magazines. Click here to start your application for Pre-Diabetes Health, Diabetes Health Pharmacist and Diabetes Health Professional.
Latest Menstruation Articles
Popular Menstruation Articles
Highly Recommended Menstruation Articles
Send a link to this page to your friends and colleagues.
Stem Cell-DNA Research
Imagine if there were a cure for diabetes that could be found inside your own body? Wouldn't it be nice if instead of depending on durable medical equipment, we could one day heal ourselves?
Researchers at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, have removed stem cells from the lining of a human uterus and converted them into insulin-producing islet or beta cells. Stem cells are master cells that, given the right nutrients and growth factors, can be coaxed to grow into any type of cell in the body. Normally, endometrial stem cells generate the lining inside the womb that is shed each month during menstruation. The researchers transplanted those cells into diabetic mice and waited. The mice were healthier looking than their untreated peers, but still had high blood sugars.
Louis DePaolo is head of the Reproductive Sciences Branch at the US National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, which funded the research. He said,, "Clearly, further work is necessary to determine why the insulin production is so low from these cells, and to enhance the ability of these cells to make more insulin. Assuming that this hurdle can be overcome, I believe we are talking five to10 years down the road."
These engineered stem cells are less controversial than embryonic stem cells because they are taken from an adult uterus. While women with type 1 diabetes could potentially have beta cells tailor-made from their own endometrial stem cells, men would still have to take anti-rejection drugs.
The research seems promising, but still too far off in the future to get excited about. DePaolo said, "Development of technologies for transplantation of tissue or cells to treat diabetes has been ongoing for the better part of three decades with some progress, but certainly not to the point where it is common practice." Those of us who are women with type 1 diabetes will keep hoping for a cure, especially one that could come from our own bodies.
Categories: Connecticut, Diabetes, Diabetes, Diabetic, Durable Medical Equipment, Embryonic Stem Cells, High/Low Blood Sugar, Iselt Cells, Menstruation, Research, The Cure, Type 1 Issues, Yale University in New Haven
Diabetes Health is the essential resource for people living with diabetes- both newly diagnosed and experienced as well as the professionals who care for them. We provide balanced expert news and information on living healthfully with diabetes. Each issue includes cutting-edge editorial coverage of new products, research, treatment options, and meaningful lifestyle issues.

Comments
This is some interesting bit of news. Although to be fair, we hear a lot about these experiments with mice that may or may not work on humans, and don't seem much progress after the official findings. A lot of money is needed for these kinds of efforts, and the diabetes donors are giving generously. The problem is, the major diabetes organizations do not always use this money the way they say they will. A lot more of it can go into research, and hopefully open up opportunities that will project a real practical cure for diabetes soon.
Add your comments about this article below. You can add comments as a registered user or anonymously. If you choose to post anonymously your comments will be sent to our moderator for approval before they appear on this page. If you choose to post as a registered user your comments will appear instantly.
When voicing your views via the comment feature, please respect the Diabetes Health community by refraining from comments that could be considered offensive to other people. Diabetes Health reserves the right to remove comments when necessary to maintain the cordial voice of the diabetes community.
For your privacy and protection, we ask that you do not include personal details such as address or telephone number in any comments posted.
Don't have your Diabetes Health Username? Register now and add your comments to all our content.
Register...
Register your Diabetes Health Username here.
Have Your Say...