[acb-diabetics] FW: Future Cures

Patricia LaFrance-Wolf plawolf at earthlink.net
Sun Oct 16 16:37:36 EDT 2011


Could be Mike, but we should also start asking for the remote thing they use
to tell the color be made accessible from the start!

 

  _____  

From: acb-diabetics-bounces at acb.org [mailto:acb-diabetics-bounces at acb.org]
On Behalf Of Mike Freeman
Sent: Sunday, October 16, 2011 12:10 PM
To: 'Discussion list for diabetics and/or ACB issues'
Subject: Re: [acb-diabetics] FW: Future Cures

 

Sounds like a wonderful new way to separate investors from their money! Also
a good way to "publish or perish". And AARP must be angling for more
diabetic members!

 

>From your resident cynic,

 

Mike Freeman

 

 

From: acb-diabetics-bounces at acb.org [mailto:acb-diabetics-bounces at acb.org]
On Behalf Of Patricia LaFrance-Wolf
Sent: Sunday, October 16, 2011 11:53 AM
To: blind diabetics of the Blind; Acb-Diabetics at Acb. Org; Joy Steigel; Fred
Marin; sandra
Subject: [acb-diabetics] FW: Future Cures

 

 

 

  _____  

From: Dave Myers [mailto:kelseyminer at charter.net]
<mailto:%5bmailto:kelseyminer at charter.net%5d>  
Sent: Sunday, October 16, 2011 11:49 AM
To: Rayanne Myers 
Cc: 'Patricia LaFrance-Wolf'
Subject: Future Cures

 

Thought you might find this interesting. Some sort of non-invasive glucose
monitoring system is needed for diabetics, especially when they are in a
hospital environment, particularly ICU and when undergoing surgery or
surgery-like procedures.
DLM 

  _____  

>From AARP Magazine September/October 2011

Future Cures - A Decade Away

 

Glucose-monitoring tattoos

 

You thought tattoos were just for punk rockers and Harley-Davidson fans?
Think again. Heather Clark, Ph.D., associate professor of pharmaceutical
sciences at Northeastern University in Boston, has developed a tattoo that
can monitor your blood sugar without constant needle pricks-a huge
advancement for the 26 million Americans with diabetes.

 

The miniature tattoo-only a few millimeters in size-is made of nano-sensors:
tiny polymer beads containing a yellow-orange dye that lights up when
glucose levels are high and darkens as glucose levels drop. While
traditional tattoos permanently stain the deeper layers of the skin, the
diabetes tattoo is applied to more superficial skin layers, so its
application is less painful and it wears off over time.

 

"The plan is to have tattoos applied once a week," says Clark. Patients will
use a handheld device to scan the tattoo several times a day for color
changes to guide their insulin use.

 

Clark's team has tracked glucose levels in tattooed mice with diabetes,
confirming these results with blood tests they took at the same time. If
upcoming clinical trials in humans pan out, the tattoos could be on the
market in a decade.

 



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