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Good Insulin Vibrations?

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Researchers at the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore have reported that an experimental study to remotely release insulin via micro-shockwaves has proven successful. The researchers injected microcapsules of insulin into the skin of mice with diabetes. The microcapsules slowly released insulin when exposed to shockwaves set off by a hand-held generator held above the injection site.

It takes about five shockwave treatments before the microcapsules are depleted and must be injected again. While people with diabetes would still need to inject insulin if the treatment proves effective in humans, the overall number of injections would decrease, according to Dipshikha Chakravortty, a professor at the Indian Institute of Science, in a Chemistry World report.

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Travis served as a staff writer for Insulin Nation and Type 2 Nation in 2015. Previously, he was a staff writer for Insight, a high school newspaper, as well as a copywriter for The Emersonian, Emerson's yearbook.

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