"Sausage Skin" to tackle most common form of diabetes
http://in.news.yahoo.com/now-sausage-skin-tackle-most-common -form-diabetes-104950823.html
Now, a 'sausage skin' to tackle most common form of diabetes!
By ANI | ANI – Sun, Aug 7, 2011London, August 7 (ANI): Scientists have developed a sleeve implant that looks like a "giant sausage skin" to beat diabetes.
The 2ft-long device, developed as an incision-less alternative to a type of weight-loss surgery known as a duodenal switch, can reverse the disease within weeks, reports the Daily Mail.
The duodenum is the name for the first 10 to 12in of the small intestine, which attaches to the stomach.
The device, the EndoBarrier, is designed to have the same effects as surgery but is far safer. It is a plastic sleeve that lines the duodenum, meaning food can only be absorbed lower down the intestine.
The procedure is performed under anaesthetic in less than an hour. The sleeve - made from a thin plastic - is inserted via the mouth and passed into the digestive tract using a thin tube.
Once in place, a sprung titanium anchor prevents it slipping out. It is removed after a year.
During trials researchers found that in obese patients who also suffered diabetes, the disease went into remission.
Initially experts believed it was a result of weight loss - but many patients were able to stop taking their diabetes medication before they began to lose weight.
The discovery has led to clinical trials at three hospitals, which found the implant also seems to lower cholesterol levels and blood pressure. (ANI)
on 9/4/11 11:23 am - Woodbridge, VA
I'm wondering about how patients do once it's removed. I thought it was intended as an option for NON-obese diabetics who wouldn't want the actual DS because they didn't need to lose weight, but this article mentions "obese patients" specifically. If you're obese AND diabetic, just get the real deal, man!
Sher-
Edited for typos.
It also had a picture of it - looked scary! Like a long plastic bag with barbed wire on it!
I thought there was something in there about some unwanted side effects but I can't remember.
I'm going to go searching for it now.....
http://www.meltingmama.net/wls/2011/04/wls-without-thewls-en dobarrier.html
Here was the "deal killer" for me:
But at roughly $5,000, the EndoBarrier, considered an advanced investigational device in the United States, is not a permanent solution to diabetes, even for patients *****spond well to it. Nor is it without risks of its own. It is designed to stay in the gut for no more than a year, after which physicians believe most patients will revert to their diabetic condition. And while it can be put in place in 25 minutes under sedation that keeps a patient conscious, it was found in one study presented this week to have slipped, become obstructed, or caused problems leading to its removal in more than one-in-three cases. Intestinal bleeding can result if it becomes dislodged.
Ummm, no thanks.....