Once-a-Day Treatment for Diabetes Richmond KY

Diabetes is a condition in which the body either does not produce enough, or does not properly respond to, insulin, a hormone produced in the pancreas. Insulin enables cells to absorb glucose in order to turn it into energy. Read on to know about a treatment for diabetes.

Steve Kochu, MD
859-285-4000
4305 Watercrest Ct
Lexington, KY
Thomas Gordon Jones, MD
860-674-8300
3200 Todds Rd Apt 201
Lexington, KY
Thomas Jos Goodenow, MD
859-268-1349
3406 Montavesta Rd
Lexington, KY
Betty Villafuerte
(502) 589-6788
201 Abraham Flexner Way
Louisville, KY
Robert Joseph Homm, MD
859-278-9151
1780 Nicholasville Rd
Lexington, KY
George Michael Veloudis
(859) 277-5736
141 North Eagle Creek Dr
Lexington, KY
James Allen Flueck, MD
859-281-4905
800 Rose St
Lexington, KY
Omolara O Fakunle
(502) 587-6010
100 E Liberty St
Louisville, KY
Stephen Lawrence Pohl, MD, MACE
859-278-2232
1760 Nicholasville Rd Ste 502
Lexington, KY
Philip Gilmer Morrow, MD
502-895-4263
4003 Kresge Way Ste 400
Louisville, KY
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Once-a-Day Treatment for Diabetes

Anyone with type one diabetes knows just how time consuming the daily routine is--multiple injections are the norm for anyone who wants to stay in good blood sugar control. Now a brand new insulin analog holds the promise of being a once-a-day regimen.

Based on the insulin Glargine and called Basalog, it's been launched in India by Biocon, a biotechnology firm. The product, meant to replace other forms of insulin which don't keep acting for a full 24 hours, will be priced 40 percent less than similar injectables, according to The Hindu.

With the number of diabetics in the world expected to double by 2020, there will be a huge market for the product, Biocon chairman and managing director Kiran Mazumdar Shaw said in The Hindu. She called it "an advanced diabetic treatment which is effective for 24 hours and can be used by those suffering from both type one and type two diabetes," according to DNA India.

The number of diabetics in the world is now 200 to 230 million,  Shaw was quoted as saying in The Hindu. That figure will spiral, and India will have many more diabetics, Shaw predicts. "India alone may have 40 million diabetics and one out of every five diabetics in the world is likely to be of Indian origin by then," Shaw said in an interview.

Most insulins take time to act, reach a peak level and then taper off, according to DNA India. But Basalog would act at a constant level for a full 24 hours.

It also would be effective in the control of HbA1c, which measures a person's blood sugar control for the previous three months. In non-diabetics, this measurement ranges from 4 to 6 percent, but in those with diabetes, anything under 7 percent is considered being in good control. Each reduction of 1 percent in the HbA1c results in a 20 percent reduction in mortality, according to DNA India...

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